
The prevalence, severity and chronicity of abuse towards older men: Insights from a multinational European survey
Author(s) -
Maria Gabriella Melchiorre,
Mirko Di Rosa,
Glória Macassa,
Bahareh Eslami,
Francisco Torres-Gonzales,
Mindaugas Stankūnas,
Jutta Lindert,
Elisabeth IoannidiKapolou,
Henrique Barros,
Giovanni Lamura,
Joaquim Soares
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0250039
Subject(s) - elder abuse , spouse , sexual abuse , medicine , physical abuse , psychological abuse , psychiatry , anxiety , domestic violence , poison control , suicide prevention , clinical psychology , environmental health , sociology , anthropology
Background Elder abuse is a growing public health question among policy makers and practitioners in many countries. Research findings usually indicate women as victims, whereas male elder abuse still remains under-detected and under-reported. We aimed to investigate the prevalence, severity and chronicity of abuse (psychological, physical, physical injury, sexual, and financial) against older men, and to scrutinize factors (e.g. demographics) associated with high chronicity of any abuse. Methods Randomly selected older men (n = 1908) aged 60–84 years from seven European cities (Ancona, Athens, Granada, Kaunas, Stuttgart, Porto, Stockholm) were interviewed in 2009 via a cross-sectional study concerning abuse exposure during the past 12 months. Results Findings suggested that prevalence of abuse towards older men varied between 0.3% (sexual) and 20.3% (psychological), with severe acts between 0.2% (sexual) and 8.2% (psychological). On the whole, higher chronicity values were for injury, followed by psychological, financial, physical, and sexual abuse. Being from Sweden, experiencing anxiety and having a spouse/cohabitant/woman as perpetrator were associated with a greater “risk” for high chronicity of any abuse. For men, severity and chronicity of abuse were in some cases relatively high. Conclusions Abuse towards older men, in the light of severe and repeated acts occurring, should be a source of concern for family, caring staff, social work practice and policy makers, in order to develop together adequate prevention and treatment strategies.