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Victimization in Unethical Unlicensed Small Residential Care Homes in the United States: The Case for Whole System Disruption.

Darcy Jones Dj McMaughanJohn M HalphenPatricia VelkyJason BurnettStacy A Drake
Published in: Journal of aging & social policy (2023)
In the United States, small residential care homes provide affordable community-based care for disabled older adults. Also called adult foster care homes, residential care facilities, group homes, or board and care homes, small residential care homes are typically private, small businesses operating in single-family dwellings that provide round-the-clock care in a home-like setting in residential neighborhoods. While most states license small residential care homes they also exist, legally and illegally, as unlicensed and unregulated operations. The quality of care in some unlicensed and unregulated small residential care homes can be questionable. Disabled older adults are targeted and victimized by unethical small residential care home operators for financial gain. This commentary highlights the need for whole system disruption to end victimization in unethical unlicensed and unregulated small residential care homes through case studies of the abuse and neglect of residents living in unethical unlicensed operations and recommends ambitious goals centered on reducing secondary financial gains and medically neglectful practices. These recommendations are at federal, state, and local levels, and include creating a federal definition of small residential care homes, increasing and coupling government incomes with state registration and employee misconduct registry checks, increasing oversight and assessment, improving temporary guardianship processes, providing avenues for reporting abuse, and developing older adult fatality review teams.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • quality improvement
  • affordable care act
  • pain management
  • physical activity
  • emergency department
  • primary care
  • long term care