| 15 Juin 2017
 
14 June 2017 | GENEVA – Around 1 in 6 older people experience some form  of abuse, a figure higher than previously estimated and predicted to  rise as populations age worldwide.
 
 A new study, supported by WHO and published in the Lancet Global Health,  has found that almost 16% of people aged 60 years and older were  subjected to either psychological abuse (11.6%), financial abuse (6.8%),  neglect (4.2%), physical abuse (2.6%) or sexual abuse (0.9%). The  research draws on the best available evidence from 52 studies in 28  countries from different regions, including 12 low- and middle-income  countries.
 
 "The abuse of older people is on the rise; for the 141 million older  people worldwide this has serious individual and societal costs,” says  Alana Officer, Senior Health Adviser, Department of Ageing and Life  Course at WHO. “We must do much more to prevent and respond to the  increasing frequency of different forms of abuse.”
 
 Elder abuse and health
 
 Awareness about elder abuse, still largely a taboo topic, has started to  increase across the world. It is defined as actions or lack of  appropriate action which can cause harm or distress to an older person,  occurring within any relationship where there is an expectation of  trust. All types of elder abuse can have an impact on the health and  wellbeing of the older person.
 
 Psychological abuse is the most pervasive and includes behaviours that  harm an older person’s self-worth or wellbeing such as name calling,  scaring, embarrassing, destroying property or preventing them from  seeing friends and family.
 
 Financial abuse includes illegally misusing an older person’s money,  property or assets. Neglect includes the failure to meet an older  person’s basic needs, such as food, housing, clothing and medical care.
 
 Health effects of abuse include traumatic injury and pain, as well as  depression, stress and anxiety. Elder abuse can lead to an increased  risk of nursing home placement, use of emergency services,  hospitalization and death.
 
 “Despite the frequency and the serious health consequences, elder abuse  remains one of the least investigated types of violence in national  surveys, and one of the least addressed in national plans to prevent  violence,” Ms Officer adds.
 
 By 2050 the number of people aged 60 and over will double to reach 2  billion globally, with the vast majority of older people living in low-  and middle-income countries. If the proportion of elder abuse victims  remains constant, the number of people affected will increase rapidly  due to population ageing,  growing to 320 million victims by 2050.
 
 “Elder abuse is rarely discussed in policy circles, less prioritized for  research and addressed by only a handful of organizations,” notes Dr  Etienne Krug, Director of the WHO Department for the Management of  Noncommunicable Diseases, Disability, Violence and Injury Prevention.  “Governments must protect all people from violence. We must work to shed  light on this important societal challenge, understand how best to  prevent it, and help put in place the measures needed.”
 
 Global strategy and action plan
 
 In May 2016, Ministers of Health adopted the WHO Global Strategy and  Action Plan on Ageing and Health at the World Health Assembly. The  Strategy provides guidance for coordinated action in countries that  aligns with the Sustainable Development Goals.
 
 Priority actions for elder abuse in the Strategy include:
- improving studies on the frequency of elder abuse particularly in low- and middle-income countries from South-East Asia, Middle East and Africa,ÂÂ for which there is little data
 - collecting evidence and developing guidance on what works to effectively prevent and respond to elder abuse. As a first step, governments need to evaluate existing efforts, such as training for care givers and use of telephone helplines, and to publish these findings
 - supporting countries to prevent and respond to elder abuse
 
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2017/abuse-older-people/en/
Link to paper in Lancet Global Health:
 http://thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(17)30006-2/fulltext
 
 For more information on elder abuse:
 http://www.who.int/ageing/projects/elder_abuse/en/
 
 WHO factsheet
 http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs357/en/
 
 World Elder Abuse Awareness Day
 
 The United Nations General Assembly, in its resolution 66/127,  designated 15 June as World Elder Abuse Awareness Day. It represents the  one day in the year when the whole world voices its opposition to the  abuse and suffering inflicted to some of our older generations.









