Archive/Detecting Elder Abuse in an Italian Emergency Department: A Six-Year Retrospective Study and Implications for Systematic Screening
Detecting Elder Abuse in an Italian Emergency Department: A Six-Year Retrospective Study and Implications for Systematic Screening
Martina Focardi, Paola D’Onofrio, Marco Carnevali et al.
2 juillet 2026
en

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Elder abuse remains a significantly underreported public health issue. The study examines how elder abuse is detected through a passive, suspicion-based case-finding pathway in an Italian university hospital emergency department (ED) and what the findings imply for improving systematic screening. Methods: This retrospective study analyzed elder abuse cases accessed at Careggi University Hospital ED (Florence, Italy) from 2017 to 2022. Eligible patients were aged ≥65 years and had suspected or confirmed elder abuse identified through Rosa Code protocol activation, abuse-related ICD-10 codes, and forensic consultation records. Two investigators independently reviewed eligible charts using predefined inclusion criteria and a standardized data-extraction form. Missing or unclear documentation was quantified descriptively, and no imputation was performed. Results: Sixty-seven elder abuse cases were identified during the six-year period, corresponding to a reported detection rate of 0.8% among the records screened for this study (mean: 11.2 cases/year). All eligible cases were captured through Rosa Code activation; ICD-10 and forensic-record searches did not identify additional cases. The majority of victims were women (76.1%), with a mean age of 75.5 years, and 76.1% had documented comorbidities. Physical abuse was the most common form (61.2%), predominantly perpetrated by family members (93.8%) within the victim’s home (64.2%). Head and neck injuries were most frequent (43.3%). A notable 50% decline in reported cases occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite law enforcement notification in 78% of cases, 65.7% of patients were discharged home. Conclusions: The study’s detection rate (<1%) falls critically short of international benchmarks (3–5%), underscoring urgent need for systematic screening using validated tools and staff training and multidisciplinary safeguarding pathways in Italian emergency departments.

IPC Classification

G06A61

Keywords

detectingelderabuseitalianemergencydepartmentsix-yearretrospectiveimplicationssystematicscreeninggeriatricsbackgroundobjectivesremainssignificantlyunderreportedpublichealthissueexaminesdetectedthroughpassive
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