Elder Financial Abuse Up 12%, $2.9 Billion Lost by Victims says Study

A new MetLife study on elder financial abuse shows an estimated $2.9 billion lost by victims in 2010, with more than half of abuse cases perpetrated by strangers. MetLife says this type of abuse remains underreported, under-recognized, and under-prosecuted, despite the Elder Justice Act becoming law in 2010 and raising the profile on both elder abuse and elder financial abuse.

This year’s study, called Elder Financial Abuse: Crimes of Occasion, Desperation, and Predation Against America’s Elders, lists factors such as low social support, clinical depression, and social vulnerability as possible reasons why some elders are victimized. It also says the greatest changes between the 2008 and 2010 studies have to do with the type of perpetrator.

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Phone scammers and other cons/scams account for 28% of all abuse cases, up from 9% in 2008. Since the previous study, however, accounts of financial abuse by the hands of family have gone down by nearly 50%, and abuse from caregivers and trusted business professionals has declined. However, abuse perpetrated by victims’ friends has doubled, and 51% of studied cases of financial abuse were perpetrated by strangers.

Most of the financial abuse victims were in the 80 to 89 age range, with women more likely to be victimized than men, says MetLife. Additionally, perpetrators were primarily male, at 60%.

MetLife says financial abuse through Medicare and Medicaid fraud resulted in the highest average losses to victims, at more than $32 million. The dollar amount for elder financial abuse increased 12% from a 2008 study’s findings, titled Broken Trust: Elders, Family, and Finances and also conducted by MetLife.

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This year’s study mentions how detrimental it is to elders when they are robbed of large amounts of money, as this jeopardizes their independence, retirement and healthcare. It calls for continued efforts to eradicate elder financial abuse, especially as it sometimes leads to other types of elder abuse.

Read the study here.

Written by Alyssa Gerace