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Cheshire County Council
County Hall
Chester, Cheshire
CH1 1SF
Email: info@cheshire.gov.uk
www.cheshire.gov.uk
24 Hour Tel: 0845 11 333 11



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Abuse Of Vulnerable Adults

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Cheshire County Council Social Services, with the support of the Police, Health Organisations, Housing, and the Voluntary and Independent Organisations have launched a campaign to stop the abuse of vulnerable adults. By drawing attention to this problem, we have made it easier for concerned people to contact their local Access Team and report what they believe to be abuse of vulnerable adults. there can be no secrets image

Together we can protect vulnerable adults, prevent and stop abuse from happening.

We are asking you to hear it, see it, say it.

Who are vulnerable adults?

A Vulnerable adult is any person aged 18 or over who is or may be in need of community care services by reason of:

  • Mental or other disability, age or illness and;
  • Who is or may be unable to take care of him / herself; or
  • Unable to protect him / herself from significant harm or serious exploitation.

What is abuse or mistreatment?

Abuse or mistreatment:

  • Can be a violation on individuals’ human or civil rights by another person or persons;
  • May consist of a single act or repeated acts;
  • Can occur in any relationship or setting;
  • May result in harm to, or serious exploitation of, the person subjected to it;
  • Physical, including hitting, slapping, punching, kicking, misuse of medication, restraint, or inappropriate sanctions;
  • Sexual, including rape and sexual assault or sexual acts to which the person has not consented or was pressured into consenting;
  • Psychological, including emotional abuse, threats, humiliation, intimidation, verbal abuse;
  • Financial or material, including theft, fraud, exploitation, the misuse or misappropriation of property, possessions or benefits;
  • Neglect, including ignoring medical or physical care needs, the withholding of adequate food, heat, clothing and medication;
  • Discriminatory, including racist, sexist, that are based on a person’s disability, and other forms of similar treatment;
  • Institutional abuse or mistreatment by a regime or by any individual within any building where care is provided.

Although the above list is fairly comprehensive it is not exhaustive.

Who does it?

Sadly it can be anyone including ones nearest and dearest. Research by Action on Elder Abuse suggests that as many as one in eleven older people in the UK are mistreated or neglected by those they trust the most. Two thirds of these are abused by members of their own family. Care staff, too, can be abusers. There are many examples of this, including those where the abusers have deliberately chosen to work in environments where there will be vulnerable people, such as those with learning disabilities.

Any types of abuse may be carried out as the result of deliberate actions, negligence or ignorance.

Where does it happen?

Abuse can happen anywhere – in a person’s home, in the street, in a residential or nursing home, at a day centre or resource centre, in a hospital or indeed any place where vulnerable people might be.

What should I do if I suspect a vulnerable adult is being abused?

Do you know a vulnerable adult or are you in a position of trust? If you believe that someone is being abused contact your local Access Team. You will be listened to and you will be supported.

Alternatively, speak to the police, doctor or nurse, or any of the organisations listed below:

Cheshire Information Centres can provide contact telephone numbers of local organisations.

What is being done?

Cheshire Social Services have the lead role in the Inter-agency Policy, Procedures and Guidance Document (Adult Protection in Cheshire) on the Protection of Vulnerable Adults from abuse. If you contact your local Access Team, you will be asked for basic information about the person you are concerned about, and who is the alleged abuser. You will be asked about yourself, and what you heard or saw. Information will then be shared on a “needs to know” basis, but you will be kept informed about who has to be told, for example, the Police if a crime may have been committed.

Together all the relevant agencies will work with the person who may be being abused, to establish what has happened, and what action the person wants taking next. Work will also be done with the alleged abuser, and multi-disciplinary options will be created which will prevent, reduce or stop further abuse from happening.

Imagine if it was your mother or father, sister, brother, son or daughter. You would want someone to speak out if they thought they were being abused. You may be being abused yourself and need support.

Break the silence contact social services, or any of the organisation listed, you will be believed and given advice about what to do.

How can I find out more?

For more details on services for older people please contact your local Access Team.

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Contact: info@cheshire.gov.uk | Disclaimer | Copyright | Legal | Access Guide | Last Edited: 18-Jul-2008