Adult Protective Services (APS) is a program in Kentucky that helps to protect adults who are elderly, disabled, or otherwise vulnerable from abuse, neglect, or exploitation.
If you suspect that an adult in Kentucky is being abused, neglected, or exploited, you can report it to APS. You can contact the Kentucky Adult Protective Services hotline at 1-800-752-6200. The hotline is staffed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
When you call the hotline, you will be asked for information about the person you are concerned about, as well as any details about the situation. APS will investigate the report and take appropriate action to protect the adult and ensure their safety.
It’s important to note that APS investigations are confidential, and the identity of the person who made the report is not disclosed to the person who is the subject of the report.
The Becker Law Office regularly assists Kentucky families whose elderly loved ones have been injured by neglect and abuse at nursing homes, retirement homes, and other long-term care facilities. Unfortunately, the problem of elder abuse in Kentucky and across the country extends far beyond nursing homes and into our communities and private residences.
The National Council on Aging says 1 in 10 Americans aged 60 and older have experienced some form of elder abuse. Some estimates say as many as 5 million elders are abused each year. Experts on elder abuse say the crime occurs far more often than it is reported, as often as 24 times for every case reported, and expect the problem to worsen as our population ages.
At Becker Law Office, we can help you and your family if you suspect an elderly person in Kentucky is being abused. We can help you obtain help for the injured senior citizen, and we may be able to help you obtain compensation to assist with medical bills and other losses, and as remuneration for pain and suffering.
Below we outline what should be done if you suspect someone in Kentucky is being subjected to elder abuse. Knowing what to do and acting promptly could save a life. The Commonwealth of Kentucky has programs for investigating abuse allegations and assisting vulnerable seniors; however, if you suspect an elderly person is in immediate danger of being harmed you should call local law enforcement authorities right away.
Kentucky law addresses the protection of elderly and vulnerable adults in Chapter 209 of the state’s revised statutes.
The KY statutes address the welfare of people who are 18 years old or older who, because of mental or physical dysfunction, are unable to manage their own resources, carry out activities of daily living, or protect themselves from neglect, exploitation, or a hazardous or abusive situation without assistance from others.
Please see our page about the warning signs of nursing home abuse for information about physical, mental, and sexual abuse, financial exploitation, and neglect, which can be applied to observations about the treatment of an elderly person in the community.
Kentucky law also establishes the availability of services for adults who are unable to take care of themselves, and provides anyone in the state the authority to make a confidential criminal complaint if they know of the abuse, neglect, or exploitation of an adult in the state, and prescribes criminal penalties for elder abuse.
Under Kentucky law, you are required to report any suspicions you have about the potential abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of an adult who has a physical or mental disability and is unable to protect themselves, such as an elderly person.
Reports of elder abuse are typically made to the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services through a 24-hour toll-free hotline at 1-877-597-2331. Calls can be made anonymously. Non-emergency reports may also be made through the Kentucky Child / Adult Protective Services Reporting System online, which is essentially email that is only monitored during business hours on weekdays.
The KY Cabinet for Health and Family Services is to investigate allegations of elder abuse and, depending on the circumstances, may be required to notify the appropriate law enforcement agency. Reporting elder abuse may lead to a criminal investigation, arrest, and prosecution of the abuser, although the primary purpose of Kentucky’s mandatory reporting laws is to get protective services to the person being abused.
Each report of elder abuse is reviewed to determine whether it needs to be investigated and/or whether the object of the complaint requires protective services. All adults are offered protective services and may accept or refuse services.
Adult Protective Services also provides voluntary, general assistance services aimed at helping adults function at their highest level of self-sufficiency and autonomy and remain in the community. General adult services may be requested on behalf of a vulnerable adult or by an adult who needs assistance.
The Louisville, KY, Police Department has established the Senior Crime Victims’ Program to assist elderly crime victims (age 60+) who reside in the Metro Louisville/Jefferson County area in cases involving elder abuse, neglect, sexual abuse, financial exploitation, and identity theft or fraud. There are two programs:
The Emergency Crisis Response Team provides immediate, short-term emergency shelter and home care services to Metro Louisville seniors who are experiencing abuse, neglect, or exploitation as a result of the crime (not self-neglect). However, clients must be referred through Adult Protective Services (502-595-4803 in Louisville) or another community-based referral source.
The In-home Emergency Protective Order Service assists in the issuance of Emergency Protective Orders (EPOs) for medically fragile/home-bound elderly victims of abuse.
Local authorities and the Commonwealth of Kentucky understand the problem of elder abuse and have established programs to raise awareness, assist the injured and punish perpetrators of crime. However, they do not have programs to make seniors who have been exploited or abused financially whole. Further, state programs are large, bureaucratic and busy, and even information about them online is not easy to find.
Our elder abuse attorneys can help you obtain assistance through state or local authorities and/or community-based services. We can also review what has happened to you or your loved one and determine whether there is a basis for a personal injury claim to recover compensation for economic losses and pain and suffering.
Our dedicated Kentucky elder abuse attorneys have more than 30 years of experience helping families of senior citizens who have been injured or neglected. If you suspect or know that an elderly loved one has been abused or neglected, contact us now for a free, confidential, and no-obligation legal consultation. Our legal team will work quickly to stop the abuse and make things right for you and yours.
Tag: Understanding Kentucky Elder Abuse Laws And How To Report Suspected Abuse