Elder Abuse Identification in the Prehospital Setting: An Examination of State Emergency Medical Services Protocols.

TitleElder Abuse Identification in the Prehospital Setting: An Examination of State Emergency Medical Services Protocols.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsNamboodri BL, Rosen T, Dayaa JA, Bischof JJ, Ramadan N, Patel MD, Grover J, Brice JH, Platts-Mills TF
JournalJ Am Geriatr Soc
Volume66
Issue5
Pagination962-968
Date Published2018 May
ISSN1532-5415
KeywordsAged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Elder Abuse, Emergency Medical Services, Female, Humans, Male, Mandatory Reporting, United States
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe statewide emergency medical service (EMS) protocols relating to identification, management, and reporting of elder abuse in the prehospital setting.

DESIGN: Cross-sectional analysis.

SETTING: Statewide EMS protocols in the United States.

PARTICIPANTS: Publicly available statewide EMS protocols identified from published literature, http://EMSprotocols.org, and each state's public health website.

MEASUREMENTS: Protocols were reviewed to determine whether elder abuse was mentioned, elder abuse was defined, potential indicators of elder abuse were listed, management of older adults experiencing abuse was described, and instructions regarding reporting were provided. EMS protocols for child abuse were reviewed in the same manner for the purpose of comparison.

RESULTS: Of the 35 publicly available statewide EMS protocols, only 14 (40.0%) mention elder abuse. Of protocols that mention elder abuse, 6 (42.9%) define elder abuse, 10 (71.4%) describe indicators of elder abuse, 8 (57.1%) provide instruction regarding management, and 12 (85.7%) provide instruction regarding reporting. Almost twice as many states met each of these metrics for child abuse.

CONCLUSION: Statewide EMS protocols for elder abuse vary in regard to identification, management, and reporting, with the majority of states having no content on this subject. Expansion and standardization of protocols may increase the identification of elder abuse.

DOI10.1111/jgs.15329
Alternate JournalJ Am Geriatr Soc
PubMed ID29566428
PubMed Central IDPMC5992078
Grant ListK76 AG054866 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
R03 AG048109 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States