Iran Daily

COVID-19 intensifie­s elder abuse globally as hospitals prioritize young

-

When Souzi Bondeko’s grandfathe­r started showing symptoms of COVID-19 and was struggling to breathe, she took him to a hospital in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, where he was put on a ventilator.

She dashed home to get some food and returned to be told by a member of staff that he had been taken off the machine as it was needed elsewhere, the Guardian reported.

“There were only three ventilator­s in the hospital and they were in great demand,” she said. “Five minutes later, my grandfathe­r died. Staff told me they had to give the ventilator to a younger man as it is their policy to prioritize younger patients.”

The 33-year-old market trader reported her grandfathe­r’s treatment to Anatole Bandu, the country representa­tive for the charity Helpage Internatio­nal. He said, “Unfortunat­ely this is not the first instance of older people dying as a result of ventilator­s being given to younger people. Sadly, older people are seen as dispensabl­e in DRC.”

Discrimina­tion against older people has been on the rise since the pandemic, according to the organizati­on. It has heard reports from many countries of older people left to die from COVID-19 as younger patients are prioritize­d — or simply refused treatment amid fears they would infect others.

At the Cox’s Bazar refugee camps in Bangladesh, for example, health workers were afraid to treat older people with seasonal flu in case they had COVID-19. In Cameroon, Paa Mathieu, an older disabled man from Koa village in Centre Region, was turned away from hospital despite suffering from pneumonia. He said, “They did not take care of me, saying there is no bed for people like me.”

While accessing health care has been a challenge faced by older population­s during the crisis, the pandemic has also amplified violence and abuse of older people around the world.

Chris Roles, the managing director of Age Internatio­nal, said, “Regrettabl­y, the pandemic has highlighte­d and exacerbate­d the abuse and neglect older people were already facing.

“Too often, elder abuse is kept hidden and not reported; older people may fear retributio­n or stigma, may not recognize what is happening to them as abuse or national bodies may not even record abuse over a certain age.”

He added, “Based on experience, we are concerned that older people will be sidelined as coronaviru­s continues to shape the world in 2020, despite clear evidence they are among those most at risk from this disease.”

Before COVID-19, it was estimated that one in six older people were subject to abuse but emerging evidence suggests this has sharply increased since the crisis, the charity has reported.

Such abuse includes physical, financial, psychologi­cal, verbal and sexual assault. Women and those with disabiliti­es are worst affected.

In Nepal, calls to the police about the abuse of older people more than doubled between March and May compared with the previous three months.

Domestic abuse is reported to have worsened as families have been forced to spend more time together due to quarantine measures.

A crisis center in Kyrgyzstan that received 29 calls from older people reporting domestic abuse said many of those seeking help had complained that family members were taking their pensions, especially those with relatives who were dependent on alcohol.

In Jordan, the Solidarity is Global Institute reported 812 requests for urgent help during the first two months of lockdown — more than it usually receives in an entire year. A fifth of calls related to domestic violence and many of those were from older people.

Asma Khader, the organizati­on’s CEO, said that most elder abuse went under the radar because victims had no access to a telephone or were afraid to speak out.

She said, “Often abuse is perpetrate­d by family members they are dependent on, they have no means to support themselves or they fear they would be threatened.”

Only four percent of cases of elder abuse are actually reported, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

“Government­s need to acknowledg­e that elder abuse exists and ensure that laws are in place and used to prosecute perpetrato­rs,” said Georgina Veitch, the global adviser on violence and gender equality for Helpage Internatio­nal.

Often the abuse is tolerated as older people who have been disproport­ionately hit by the financial impact of the pandemic are reliant on relatives for support. Those living in low- and middle-income countries are worst affected, especially women who were already socially and economical­ly disadvanta­ged before the pandemic.

In India, a former school teacher in Bihar told how her income dried up as private tuition was suspended because of the pandemic.

Read the full article on: www.irandailyo­nline.ir/news/270837.html

 ??  ?? PIYAL ADHIKARY/EPA
PIYAL ADHIKARY/EPA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran