Elder abuse and barriers to help seeking in Chennai, India: a qualitative study

Type Working Paper - Journal of elder abuse & neglect
Title Elder abuse and barriers to help seeking in Chennai, India: a qualitative study
Author(s)
Volume 26
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
Page numbers 60-79
URL http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/08946566.2013.782786#.VdnCBPntmko
Abstract
This qualitative study attempts to understand why older persons abused by their family members in India do not seek help. In-depth interviews over three visits were conducted with six adults aged 65 years and above who had been physically abused by their sons/daughters-in-law. The interviews were transcribed and themes identified using a thematic analysis method. The barriers preventing a person from seeking help were service-related (accessibility, lack of trust); religious (Karma); family (deleterious effects on family, family members’ responses to help seeking); and individual (socioeconomic dependency, self-blame). The unique findings that surfaced were fear of losing one's identity by losing one's family, attributing abuse to past sins, and concern over not attaining salvation if one's sons did not perform funeral rites. The authors propose a checklist to explore and assess the barriers to seeking help. Recommendations for geroprofessionals in overcoming barriers include implementing outreach programs and changing the misconceptions regarding Karma.

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