# Barriers to Treatment Initiation Among Elder Abuse Victims: An Analysis of Referrals to the PROTECT Program

**Authors:** Clare Culver, Rebecca Kiflom, Isabel Rollandi, Tobi Abramson, Jo Anne Sirey

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3887 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study examines why some victims of elder abuse do not start mental health treatment, finding that language and age are key barriers.

## Contribution

The study identifies language and age as significant barriers to treatment initiation among elder abuse victims.

## Key findings

- 78.2% of referrals to the PROTECT program initiated treatment, while 13.4% refused services.
- Clients who speak English or Spanish are significantly more likely to start treatment than those who speak other languages.
- Initiators of treatment were significantly younger than those who refused.

## Abstract

Elder abuse (EA) is a growing public health concern, affecting 1 in 6 older adults globally. Among victims, one-third experience significant depression, yet most remain untreated due to barriers to mental health care access. We analyzed factors influencing therapy initiation among EA victims referred to the PROTECT program, an evidence-based, short-term depression treatment provided alongside abuse amelioration services. We assessed demographic and abuse-specific barriers to treatment initiation (defined as attending an initial evaluation visit), as well as reasons for exclusion or attrition. Of 501 eligible referrals received between May 2020-December 2024, 78.2% initiated treatment, 8.4% were unreachable, and 13.4% refused services prior to initiating treatment. EA victims were racially diverse (57.6%) and mostly female (81.6%). No significant differences were found between initiators and refusers in gender, race, abuse status, legal action, time to assignment, or depression severity. Initiators were significantly younger than those who refused, p =. 045. Clients speaking English or Spanish were significantly more likely to start treatment compared to speakers of other languages (p = 0.010; OR = 4.40). Findings suggest that demographic and legal factors may not significantly influence treatment engagement in this population while language and age may continue to act as barriers for EA victims. PROTECT was designed to help reduce these barriers by addressing socioeconomic limitations and by proactively reaching out to participants rather than requiring them to seek services. Continuing to address these factors is essential for designing targeted strategies to enhance mental health service access and initiation in this vulnerable population.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** depression (MONDO:0002050)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761904