TY - JOUR
T1 - Nannies go rogue? A call for research into nanny-induced elder abuse in China
AU - Su, Zhaohui
AU - McDonnell, Dean
AU - Bentley, Barry L
AU - Dai, Wenjie
AU - Diao, Ya
AU - Feng, Yujuan
AU - Kadier, Sajidai
AU - Milawuti, Patiguli
AU - Alimu, Tumaresi
AU - Dawadanzeng, null
AU - Wu, Xinxin
AU - Jiang, Jianlin
AU - Liu, Yifan
AU - Yu, Xin
AU - Zou, Xiang
AU - Nie, Jing-Bao
AU - da Veiga, Claudimar Pereira
AU - Xiang, Yu-Tao
PY - 2023/12/19
Y1 - 2023/12/19
N2 - Summary Older people often face varied and vicious abuse from care workers. Situations are typically more pronounced for older people who live with additional cognitive or physical difficulties, such as dementia and disabilities, the prevalence of which has been on the rise in China and elsewhere. Recent reported discoveries of elder abuse in China, which span alarming levels of verbal, physical, psychological, financial, and sexual abuse, have almost all been caused by nannies or ‘bao mu’. Different from Western countries, the word nanny is often used to refer to people who offer caregiving help in residential settings at large, regardless of the age of the care recipients. What is also different is the lack of regulations or even rigorous training and evaluation processes for nannies in China: almost anyone can become a nanny—even though a background check is often required for nannies, this process is often highly variable and dependent on the specific labour agencies that nannies are registered with. Yet without structured studies and systematic data, little is known about the extent and severity of nanny-induced elder abuse in China. To this end, this article aims to discuss the unique elderly care environment—such as the ‘721 Rule’—in China, particularly in the post-COVID era, and highlight the critical need for timely and rigorous studies on the potential prevalence and severity of nannies’ abuse and neglect of older people.
AB - Summary Older people often face varied and vicious abuse from care workers. Situations are typically more pronounced for older people who live with additional cognitive or physical difficulties, such as dementia and disabilities, the prevalence of which has been on the rise in China and elsewhere. Recent reported discoveries of elder abuse in China, which span alarming levels of verbal, physical, psychological, financial, and sexual abuse, have almost all been caused by nannies or ‘bao mu’. Different from Western countries, the word nanny is often used to refer to people who offer caregiving help in residential settings at large, regardless of the age of the care recipients. What is also different is the lack of regulations or even rigorous training and evaluation processes for nannies in China: almost anyone can become a nanny—even though a background check is often required for nannies, this process is often highly variable and dependent on the specific labour agencies that nannies are registered with. Yet without structured studies and systematic data, little is known about the extent and severity of nanny-induced elder abuse in China. To this end, this article aims to discuss the unique elderly care environment—such as the ‘721 Rule’—in China, particularly in the post-COVID era, and highlight the critical need for timely and rigorous studies on the potential prevalence and severity of nannies’ abuse and neglect of older people.
KW - General Medicine
U2 - 10.1093/qjmed/hcad287
DO - 10.1093/qjmed/hcad287
M3 - Article
SN - 1460-2725
JO - QJM
JF - QJM
ER -