3. Results
Responses from 126 participants were thematically analyzed. Of these, 70 were healthcare providers or social service workers who did not work in healthcare-related fields (e.g., public health workers), 20 were social workers, 21 were individuals who worked in SV organizations, nine were long-term care administrators or ombudsmen, and six worked in law enforcement. In this study, these workers are collectively referred to as service providers or participants.
Of these 126 service providers, 26 (21%) indicated that they worked once or more per week with SV survivors, 34 (27%) indicated that they worked once or more per month with SV survivors, 32 (25%) indicated that they worked once or more per year with survivors, and 34 (27%) indicated that they did not work with SV survivors at all in their field of work, although they did work in fields that served older adults (who could be victimized). So, the majority of the service providers (73%) indicated that they did work with SV survivors in some capacity as part of their work, although 27% were not answering the questions based on direct practice experience with survivors but rather in the context of working with older adults who may be at risk of SV. Of those 27% who indicated they did not directly work with survivors as part of their job, three noted personally experiencing SV since turning 50: one shared that they learned of a coworker being sexually abused after turning 50, one shared that they learned of a friend being sexually abused after turning 50, two had romantic partners who experienced SV after turning 50, and one indicated learning of someone they know being sexually abused after turning 50 but did not disclose their relationship to the victim. Thus, eight (nearly 30%) of these participants still either directly experienced SV after turning 50 or personally knew someone who did, which may demonstrate the personal relevance of the problem of SV in later life beyond the professional relevance of this public health issue, owing to their work with older adults. Highlighting personal relevance may also be useful for consideration when developing bystander trainings to inform service providers of the problem of SV in later life and why it is a significant problem that service providers should learn about even if they do not knowingly work with survivors.
The majority of the sample (
n = 104) was younger than 50 years, while 22 were 50 years or older. Most were men (
n = 69), 56 were women, and one service provider was transgender. Nearly half of the service providers were White (
n = 60), while most were members of non-dominant racial or ethnic groups: 35 were Black or African American, 12 were Asian, eight were U.S. Indigenous or Native American, five were Latino or of Spanish origin, four were White African, one was Middle Eastern, and one indicated another racial background. While most participants identified as heterosexual (
n = 97), 3 identified as gay or lesbian, 22 identified as bisexual, 1 identified as pansexual, 2 identified as asexual, and 1 preferred not to share their orientation. While most of the service providers were not SV survivors, 34 (26.98%) indicated that they were survivors of SV.
Table A2 provides an overview of these demographic characteristics.
Five overarching themes were identified. These included misconceptions of SV in later life and unique barriers to preventing it; needs for knowledge, awareness, research and education; policy and resource development, victim blame and internalized stigma, and ageism, intersectional prejudice (based on various identities that are marginalized owing to structural oppression), and rape culture [
32]. These themes will be discussed in the following sections.
3.1. Misconceptions of Sexual Violence in Later Life and Unique Barriers to Preventing It
There was an emphasis on SV being a complex and pervasive problem across the lifespan with some participants suggesting that the age of the victim is not relevant. As one participant put it, “Is it common for 50 and older? [It is] wrong for any age”. Still, other participants noted that they had not considered SV to be an issue for adults who were in their 50s and older prior to participating in this study, as one participant admitted, “I usually think of people my own age (younger) but [I] never thought of how older folks manage [SV], or if they had experienced [SV] when they were younger”. Similarly, a cited barrier to preventing SV against adults who are 50 and older was that SV against older adults is not commonly discussed in public. Additional barriers to preventing and addressing SV in later life are described in the following four sub-themes, surrounding (a) stereotypes of SV and older adults, (b) medical issues and credibility, (c) vulnerability, and (d) generational influences on what constitutes SV.
3.1.1. Stereotypes of Sexual Violence and of Older Adults
The results suggest that misunderstandings about the nature of SV and who can be victimized have also been influenced by stereotypes about SV as well as about older adults and the aging process. For example, with regard to SV stereotypes, as one participant put it, “rape or child molestation are generally considered the two extremes of sexual abuse”, suggesting that further understanding on what constitutes SV is needed. Other participants similarly reflected this. As an example, similarly, a social worker noted that when thinking of SV overall, “the first thing that comes to mind is an adult abusing a child”. And when reflecting on prevention needs for SV in later life, another healthcare worker suggested that SV is “important to particularly children and woman”. This may reflect stereotypes about who is impacted by SV, leaving older adults out of the narrative, and in this case, out of future recommendations for prevention despite the focus of the study being on SV in later life.
It is noteworthy that when child sexual abuse was introduced in response to the questions that were analyzed, which were focused on SV in later life, child sexual abuse was most often referenced by SV agency workers, social workers, and healthcare workers, although one long-term care administrator suggested a need for SV prevention to begin in childhood (which was a common sentiment, but this was mostly among SV agency workers and social workers as well as among some healthcare providers). For example, SV agency workers noted early life SV can increase risks for SV later in life. And some healthcare workers underscored the importance of teaching children early on about how to avoid SV (e.g., through refusal to engage in sexual activities, placing responsibility at the individual level on children and parents and at the organizational level on schools and religious leaders to prevent risks for SV that can impact later life).
In addition to this, a healthcare provider recommended, “I think the best thing to do is to make sure people of all ages know how important it is to not allow strangers being in their house if they do not know them, especially if they are seniors and disadvantaged in any way”, both reflecting a belief that most SV is stranger-based and that frailty in later life is common.
3.1.2. Medical Issues and Credibility
Dementia was noted as adding to the complexity of SV in later life, as for example, one healthcare provider shared that SV against people who are 50 years and older “may not be believed or written off due to medication effects or dementia”. Dementia has also been highlighted in research as a barrier to prevention in later life, owing to concerns surrounding credibility among people living with dementia which can raise risks for SV [
1,
2]. All service providers who referenced dementia as a barrier to preventing and addressing SV in later life worked in healthcare, which may suggest that healthcare workers are more aware of unique risk factors for SV and barriers to preventing and addressing it among older adults. Further, determining consent, including for medical examinations following SV, is a unique issue for people living with dementia [
1].
3.1.3. Vulnerability
While SV was considered a major problem across the lifespan, some participants believed that older adults were more vulnerable to SV, or as one participant put it, “easier to be taken advantage of”. Another participant added, “Older people are most likely attacked because they believe no one will believe them”, Other participants cited structural issues, with SV not being taken seriously, which will be described in a separate theme. Thus, the reasons for the greater perceived vulnerability to SV among adults who are 50 years and older varied among participants.
3.1.4. Generational Influences on What Constitutes Sexual Violence
The participants also shared that understandings of SV can vary depending on culture, and it was noted that “older people grew up in a time that unwanted sexual behavior was looked at much differently than it is today”, highlighting potential generational differences in how SV is understood.
SV definitions also varied across the sample. Remaining needs for a clear and shared definition of SV have also been reflected by researchers [
1,
2]. Still, it is noteworthy that understandings of personal experiences with SV and sexual harassment and perceptions of SV against older clients can be influenced by intersectional factors like age, gender, and culture, which will be discussed in a separate theme, and these can vary across generations [
33]. Sexual harassment was not officially recognized until the 1986 case of Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson; thus, sexual harassment did not gain national public attention in the US until the 1990s (e.g., with the Tailhook scandal and the Clarence Thomas hearings) [
33]. The potential for generational differences in awareness of what constitutes power imbalances (e.g., owing to gender) cannot be dismissed. Yet, awareness of power imbalances and how power can be used to coerce, as well as awareness of what constitutes “normal” or acceptable behavior, can influence how SV is understood and subsequently addressed (or not addressed) [
2,
33].
More recently, Bows (2018) also found that the SV practitioners in her study found it challenging to appreciate the generational social and cultural differences older survivors navigated when they were younger, during a time when public discussions on SV did not occur [
1]. This was referenced by service providers in the current study as well, as several service providers noted that SV was not as openly discussed among this current cohort of older adults. One participant described this generation as one in which, “you just didn’t speak up when things like that happened”. Thus, as another service provider pointed out, “social standards” (later described by this participant as ‘social norms’) within given generations can present barriers to preventing SV against people who are 50 and older. As such, awareness and understandings of unacceptable sexual behavior not only vary among researchers but can also vary by geography, culture, and generation, including for professionals who witness SV in later life and/or receive reports of it, which could have influenced the participants’ perspectives on SV against adults 50 and older, particularly given the sample mostly comprising service providers who were younger than 50 years [
1,
2,
33].
In consideration of many older adults growing up “having to keep [quiet]” about SV, more SV resources tailored to older adults were recommended by the service providers. Moreover, a need to learn more about the social norms older adults grew up with was noted, along with further training on the ability to effectively communicate with older adults, to advance prevention. Still, it is noteworthy that the only reference to generational influences on how SV is understood and discussed was identified by service providers who worked in healthcare. Further training on generational contexts and how this may impact reporting may be needed for other professions as well (e.g., for social workers, SV agency workers, and law enforcement).
3.2. Needs for Knowledge, Awareness, Research and Education
The participants expressed concerns surrounding persistent needs for awareness and the impacts such needs can have on perceptions of SV, emphasizing that SV, as one participant noted, is “more common than we think”. A need for greater community and organizational awareness (e.g., in long-term care organizations) was identified across industry types. With this awareness, greater awareness of where to report SV once it occurs was recommended, which could aid in preventing further SV from occurring.
Some expressed gratitude for the study as well, noting they did not know SV was a problem in later life prior to the survey, further underscoring needs for more awareness, including among professionals. For example, a participant reported “there are many people… suffering this kind of event. So this study is very helpful to help people realize this issue”. Beyond serving survivors, several participants had survived earlier life SV as well, which may have influenced the gratitude expressed for the ways research can validate lived experiences. One participant who shared they survived SV in later life noted “having someone believe me” was essential, adding “thank you for trying to put something together to help [victims]”.
3.2.1. Influences of Power on Awareness of SV in Later Life
The influence of power on understanding SV was shared as well. Some participants noted that power affords opportunity to frame the narrative, including through mainstream media, at the societal level. One participant stated, “TV has made a huge difference in domestic violence due to victims and aggressors seeing there are relationships modeled without such behavior. Simply being aware… of a different and better way is the first step”.
Power imbalances were particularly noted between men and women, as men were identified as having more power over women to abuse them. Power was also identified as a considerable factor that may influence SV and how it is addressed in work contexts, as imbalances in power were identified as a key barrier to addressing SV. For example, a healthcare worker noted that some victims may be afraid to report SV owing to the fear of losing their job. Still, the possibility to use positions of power to condemn and respond to SV was also mentioned.
3.2.2. Considerations for Education and Awareness
Needs for more education on SV in later life and for greater public awareness were noted as key barriers to preventing SV in later life. A participant shared, “I heard about this happening before when I worked at a nursing home”, in reference to resident-to-resident SV, adding “they had a class about [SV]. But aside from that I’ve never heard it… discussed in a public setting”. Another healthcare service provider simply noted that the public should be better informed about this issue and how to react to it.
In addition, one participant suggested “abuse training should be mandatory for all employees in all organizations”, highlighting needs for awareness at the organizational level. Another recommended “Education! Teaching the people that care for other people that it happens”. This sentiment was common. For example, another participant shared “my only experience with this has been in a nursing home setting. Unfortunately, I have saw several incidents being reported… I have always believed that more classes should be given, and training, on dealing with this”. Not only was a need for further training noted, but the desire to learn more about how to best prevent SV in later life was underscored, as one participant shared, “I work in a care facility so I am interested in the welfare of the elderly people around me. Knowing what to look for… with those elderly people would be incredibly helpful”. Another participant asserted, “Education is needed regarding appropriate vs. inappropriate touching”.
Research was understood as essential to awareness, as one participant noted needs for studies with “accurate statistics” on prevalence, along with “listen[ing] to as many stories as possible to look for patterns” to better understand SV in later life.
Further, a different participant, who worked in law enforcement and shared learning while off duty about a caregiver in a facility sexually abusing an older adult, which he reported to the caregiving agency where the caregiver worked, emphasized the importance of further organizational awareness, noting that some agencies “have no clue this goes on”. This participant later learned that “the caregiver was fired” after the caregiving facility was made aware of the SV occurring. Still, it was not noted whether a police report or APS report was also filed in this case, which may reflect the taboo nature of SV in later life and support the recommendations of other service providers for a clear system for reporting SV that occurs in later life, as other service providers shared that SV in later life is seldom reported.
3.3. Needs to Take Sexual Violence Seriously through Policy and Resource Development
Several participants emphasized that SV is not perceived as a serious problem in society, including SV in later life. For example, one participant shared, “people don’t take the reports seriously or really monitor older adults”. Still, another participant stressed, “People still take this lightly and they are victims without knowing”, referencing limited public (or societal-level) knowledge on what constitutes SV, in general, across the lifespan. Limited finances for programs, transportation, and other resources to address SV in later life were highlighted. One participant suggested “better screening of employees who work with older people”. Ongoing needs for more outreach with at-risk communities was also identified as a barrier to prevention along with “more [resources] in all towns and cities”, as one participant noted, “there are not near enough around”. Another added, “Most hospitals and police stations have people trained to deal with sexual abuse. But in small towns like mine there aren’t any places to receive counseling for victims… every town should have a place like that”.
This was attributed to greater surveillance in long-term care facilities and needs for more frequent prosecution. Concerns for improved systems for reporting were also commonly expressed. A participant suggested, “There needs to be more public advertising for ways to report sexual abuse”. A call was made for additional anonymous online reporting options, which may highlight needs for outreach to improve awareness of resources, such as through bystander approaches. Beyond increasing surveillance in nursing homes, which was recommended by several participants, in-home care is in need of further surveillance, enhanced screening and training, and higher-quality care to enhance prevention, as SV in later life not only occurs in nursing homes but it frequently occurs within the community as well [
2,
18,
28]. As such, more resources positioned closer to where older adults live [
16] and further efforts to strengthen community connections have been recommended to create more supportive environments [
1,
16,
28].
More supportive work environments were particularly recommended to advance prevention along with SV-related supports for older victims, including through individual and group counseling and peer support [targeted] toward “adults/geriatrics”. For example, a participant suggested that older adults should be afforded “a multitude of support… so they may feel as if they can talk about [SV]”, adding that “people of their age” (in later life) may “help support them” including with “how to talk comfortably about sex”.
3.4. Victim Blame and Internalized Stigma
Several participants highlighted that victims are perceived as responsible, as SV is understood as preventable potentially through self-defense or firmer boundaries. One participant underscored that a common perception is that “especially women solicit this through their clothes or behavior”. A participant noted it is widely believed “that somehow, you were asking for it. Whether you were just being nice and polite… that was read as being flirtatious, or whether you were wearing something you look good in… somehow that invites others to touch you”. Yet another shared “a lot of people” believe that victims “must [have] done something to bring the situation upon themselves”. A different participant highlighted that ageism can impact this, as “the victim could be blamed for not being sane or having the right mind or that they are old fashioned”.
A participant shared, “another belief is that no really means yes”, referencing gendered sociocultural influences. Another participant observed that a prevailing perception is “that women deserve it because of the way they dress, that men deserve to have sex whenever they want”, highlighting gendered understandings of SV. Another stressed it is widely believed that “the woman is to blame”, as “men can’t control their sexual desires”. Further, a participant shared, some older adults fear “being made to feel badly, like they should have been more careful”.
Self-internalized victim blame was discussed as well, and in particular, embarrassment was frequently noted. For example, one service provider shared that survivors who are 50 and older “might feel ashamed of what happened or blame themselves for not being more careful” and “too embarrassed to seek out help”. Still, some of the embarrassment older survivors may encounter was attributed by the service providers to “social norms” that promote silence around SV.
Further, the participants called attention to the social taboo surrounding SV in later life and the strong emotions it evokes while expressing anger that SV occurs. The anger and fear participants expressed may be linked with the social taboo surrounding SV in later life. For example, several participants shared that reflecting on SV in later life resulted in discomfort with discussing SV particularly owing to the emotional pain that victims experience. As one participant concluded, “The pain that the women have during that time will make me… cry”. It is possible that multi-level silence, among individuals, organizations, and at the societal level, has resulted from strong emotions and discomfort with the idea that older adults are sexually abused. The potential role of ageism and sexism in this silence and in stigma surrounding SV in later life was noted by several service providers. This reflects research that has highlighted the ways ageism and sexism have influenced the shock that is commonly experienced by service providers [
1,
5].
The service providers recommended that the taboo surrounding SV in later life must be addressed. One suggestion for addressing this taboo that was offered was the recommendation to encourage more open and more frequent discourse on SV in later life. For example, one participant shared, “when people think about [SV] they usually think about older men and young girls, or young men and… women, but there isn’t much conversation about [SV] in people over 50”, noting more open discussions of SV in later life would result in “people [realizing] they aren’t alone and [speaking] up more”.
3.5. Ageism, Intersectional Prejudice and Rape Culture
Ageism was identified as a barrier to preventing SV in later life, as a participant suggested, “older people may not want to address these issues because of embarrassment”. Another participant noted, “The victim could be blamed for not being sane or having the right mind or that they are old fashioned”. It was noted that this is not helped by current stereotypes of elders and sexuality, as one participant concluded, “people believe that older people are not sexual”. Some participants also mentioned that society members generally do not feel comfortable talking with older adults. This can present a substantial barrier to both preventing and addressing SV in later life. Moreover, the participants stressed that older adults must be believed rather than dismissed.
Several participants noted that beyond heightened risks for SV that women experience, older women are vulnerable owing to being older and potentially to experiencing more health issues that are expected with growing older despite SV in later life not being widely acknowledged. As one participant put it, in addition to women being more vulnerable to SV, “often people who are ill, institutionalized, or elderly may be at greater risk due to frailty or chronic health conditions”, suggesting that gender, ability, and age can all increase risks for SV. Accordingly, this same participant cited a need for “more supportive resources” for older adults and highlighted that victims living with dementia are commonly disbelieved, which can impact how SV in later life is addressed.
Another participant described the influence of sexism on women being at a greater risk for SV than men and pointed out that this can be more pronounced depending on “cultural norms” or a victim’s age, adding that people who are older than 50 may be understood as senile and easier to control due to being older, which can result in unique intersectional risks for SV among older adults. This same participant later described learning of SV against an older “bed ridden” woman by a former male colleague in a long-term care facility, highlighting an example of encountering these intersectional risk factors for victimization in her practice with older adults.
A separate participant suggested, “examine attitudes toward death and dying and how they affect the elderly”, adding that “many stereotypes exist surrounding the realities of being an older adult”, thus pointing out the role in age-based stereotypes and potentially disease and dying being prominent factors that can influence how the process of aging is understood. This can present a barrier to interests in learning about issues older adults experience and how to prevent and address them if, for example, younger service providers are afraid of death and dying and associate older adults and growing older with death and dying. Beyond this, other participants observed that limited mobility can raise risks for SV, which may be more pronounced in later life, noting that this is an added risk factor to consider in addition to the greater vulnerability women experience.
Gendered influences on SV were commonly observed across professions, as a participant noted that SV is perceived as a response to “people ask[ing] for it… or that it’s just ‘boys being boys’ or ‘girls being girls’”. Others attributed gendered vulnerability to power and privilege, as a participant stressed, “If men are in power, then these things will never be [acknowledged]”. Another shared, “Powerful men often get away with sexual assault”, noting SV they learned of, after which the survivor remained silent, because the perpetrator “was a powerful man”, adding the victim “has had PTSD since”.
Several participants pointed out that SV perceptions generally involve “men abusing women” although “the roles could be reversed”, as another noted “it is… believed that men [cannot] really experience this kind of abuse”, highlighting that men can be victims despite research on male victims being limited, including in later life.
Culture was also identified as potentially impacting trust or mistrust of authorities, which can limit reporting SV in later life in addition to the other factors that are discussed above. One participant shared “definitely age and the barriers surrounding the topic of sex and sexual assault” impact perceptions of SV, especially in later life. This same participant pointed out that “most younger folk are more open about it than older folk are”, yet this “can also be used for an assaulter’s advantage, as then they are less likely to express or talk about their assault or risk their social standing and image”.
4. Discussion
The results highlight that SV is complex and involves violence in general, particularly in later life, as the participants emphasized the taboo surrounding SV, which evokes strong emotions, especially in later life, owing to older adults not being understood as at risk for SV, as the service providers have highlighted. This reflects available research, such as that of Bows (2018) [
1], who attributed strong responses to SV in later life among service providers to influences of intersectional ageism and sexism. Consistent with the Critical Feminist Gerontological Framework and with the SEM, several ways age- and gender-based power dynamics can influence perceptions, policies and resources that aid in prevention at individual, relational, organizational and societal levels were identified.
Power imbalances, discrimination, particularly based on age and gender, and stigma can be used to promote external and internalized victim blame, which was identified as a key barrier to preventing SV in later life in particular. The service providers stressed that older adults often feel that no one will believe them (e.g., as one participant put it, that older adults are ‘delusional’, or ‘not in their right mind’ owing to ageist beliefs about older adults being senile). This is supported by the recommendations of researchers as well [
1,
2,
8,
16]. Further, this finding supports research that has demonstrated dynamics of power and vulnerability surrounding age, gender and other social demographic characteristics that place individuals at a greater risk for SV [
1,
16,
18], further reflecting the Critical Feminist Gerontological–Social Ecological Perspective that guided this study.
Beyond barriers to reporting, several multi-level perceptions of SV were identified as barriers to prevention (e.g., needs for more outreach and awareness to address age- and gender-based prejudice). Accordingly, further policy and resource development was strongly recommended to improve education and awareness and reduce prejudice. The results suggest the reverse is also true; mis/understandings about SV can impact policies that may aid in prevention and intervention and impede the development, targeted population/s and implementation of prevention and intervention efforts. Thus, if SV is not considered a problem in later life, related training and screening for signs of SV among older healthcare patients or screening for offenders in long-term care facilities or within the community may not be mandated, limiting sexual education and potentially in turn, impacting community health.
4.1. Implications for Practice
The findings highlight multi-level stereotypes of SV and older adults, and their influence on how SV is perceived, including in later life, with implications for prevention. At the relational level, older survivors are routinely disbelieved, even by family members, friends, and colleagues. This is supported by extant research [
1,
2,
5,
16]. Social workers and other healthcare and social services practitioners can work with community members, family, friends and caregivers to ensure greater support for older survivors and older at-risk populations to enhance prevention. This can be achieved through tailoring bystander interventions for practitioners who work with older adults and being more inclusive of older adults in SV organization trainings. Education and training that challenge personal, organizational and societal stereotypes, namely, through bystander approaches, may also increase knowledge and awareness of where to report SV in later life [
1,
2].
Results support existing research that suggests SV is a gendered issue across the lifespan and including in later life [
18]. Still, participants noted that men can be victims, and further attention is needed to the needs of male and transgender or gender-neutral victims, including in later life. Advocacy is also needed to ensure safe and supportive environments across the life course through challenging stereotypes via community and organizational education. The service providers in this study shared an eagerness to learn how to identify SV in later life, and several service providers noted a desire to learn more about SV in later life, which they had not considered to be a problem in later life prior to the study. Further trainings to educate service providers on how to identify SV against older adults, as the service providers requested, could substantially enhance prevention. Moreover, several participants noted that they did not know how to talk to older adults, and wanted to learn about how to best communicate with older adults, to help address SV when it occurs against adults who are 50 and older. This would in turn prevent further SV from occurring in later life.
In addition, clinical supervisors, administrators and other professionals should be mindful helping clients navigate SV, as it can trigger painful memories among both clients and professionals, and that re-experiencing trauma may impact quality of care. This warrants an ongoing assessment of practitioner needs. It is critical to identify, prevent and address re-traumatization among practitioners (e.g., through vicarious trauma and concerns for workplace safety). Potential benefits from efforts to ensure a safe trauma-informed environment could include greater individual and organizational wellness, productivity and retention, and shifts in societal perceptions over time.
4.2. Implications for Policy
Urgent needs were identified by the diverse sample of service providers in this study for community resources, including clear policies to identify risks for, to protect, and to address the needs of older victims. In addition, needs were identified for policies to enhance current screening strategies in order to identify past offenders, including during the hiring process in organizations. In addition, the participants identified needs to prosecute more offenders in order to best prevent and address SV in later life.
Some participants in this study, who worked directly with older adults and with survivors of SV, described shock and disgust when reflecting on the possibility that older adults could be sexually abused, as supported by emerging research [
1,
2,
5]. This supports the recommendations provided in earlier research [
1,
5] as well as by the service providers in this study that further policies are especially needed to support and promote greater awareness while also addressing ageism and sexism. This may be achieved through requiring organizational trainings on SV that feature a diverse age range of victims and perpetrators and, in turn, challenge stereotypes that older adults are no longer sexual beings and that they cannot be targets of SV.
Outreach efforts are also needed to ensure that survivors and service providers are included in initiatives to prevent and address SV and trauma in later life. This could help with developing and expanding appropriate victim-centered resources. Resource needs were also highlighted for rural areas by the service providers in this study. The participants suggested that hospital workers and law enforcement should be trained to address SV in later life in all small towns in particular.
4.3. Implications for Research
While the gratitude shared for the survey was unanticipated, it demonstrates particular value in SV research in later life. Service providers’ comments suggest that conducting research on SV in later life can increase awareness among participants, or in this case, service providers themselves, which has the potential to influence change at the organizational level.
Additionally, the ways SV were understood, in general, across the lifespan, and specifically against adults who are 50+, may have been influenced by generational and sociocultural contexts, which merits further research. For example, in contrast to past social norms surrounding greater public silence on SV, the #MeToo movement has recently begun to address myths about SV by underscoring forms of SV that are not stranger-based, such as IPV-related SV, SV in the workplace, and coercion [
2]. This greater awareness of SV has also led to more discussions and, in turn, disclosures of SV [
28]. While service providers can offer valuable insight into how SV is understood among helping professionals that diverges from how researchers understand SV, potential generational influences on how SV is understood may have resulted in the service providers describing SV in a way that differs from how at-risk older adults and older survivors may describe SV [
1,
2,
33], which should be further explored.
In terms of the potential impacts of social influences on how service providers understand and respond to SV at the organizational level, it is worth highlighting that while the 2017 #MeToo movement underscored less previously recognized SV contexts, it has focused largely on youth, featuring young, attractive, White, able-bodied female actresses who benefit from multiple forms of privilege that not all SV victims experience [
28,
34]. Simultaneously, an emphasis has been placed on the vulnerability and victimhood of the young, White, able-bodied actresses [
28,
35]. Although women are disproportionately victimized and anyone can experience SV, regardless of privilege, this focus, on young, White, able-bodied “perfect” victims was not the intent of the original #MeToo movement, created by Tarana Burke, to help girls and women who live on the margins share their stories as survivors [
35]. The recently coopted #MeToo movement has caused harm to survivors and at-risk populations who continue to be marginalized and acknowledged as at-risk. This #MeToo movement (beginning with the hashtag in 2017) did not, for example, advance an awareness of SV in later life but directed further focus on historic “perfect victims” based on ageist, racist, sexist, heterosexist, and ableist social norms [
35].
Considering the ways media can influence prevention and intervention across SEM levels, in addition to researching effective training strategies for preventing and addressing SV (e.g., bystander trainings) and testing more inclusive versions of these trainings among service providers, research on other information sources may be warranted. For example, future research may explore the use of social media or other sources for raising awareness of SV in later life among service providers, as one participant recommended drawing attention to SV in later life in “the media”, “PSAs” and in films, underscoring multiple influences on how service providers understand SV. Similar participant recommendations highlight that prevention and intervention research should extend beyond organizational settings, as limited public awareness of SV as a problem in later life can impact how practitioners respond to it and thus prevent further SV in later life from occurring [
34].
Longitudinal studies focused on efforts to shift perspectives and advance awareness and prevention are recommended. Providers’ comments demonstrated their view that culture and power can influence whether SV is taboo, influencing victim blame and internalized shame. Further research is also needed on how culture, power and privilege may influence SV perceptions and prevention, especially in later life. Considering the ways different forms of prejudice are linked (e.g., individuals who endorse ageist beliefs are also likely to endorse racist and sexist beliefs) and greater risks for SV among racially non-dominant groups owing to multi-level prejudice, further focus is needed on the prevention and intervention needs of non-dominant populations in particular.
Moreover, the results support the recommendations of Bows (2018) [
1] that further interdisciplinary research is needed with practitioners who serve survivors and/or older adults. Service providers in fields of social work, public health, sexual violence, criminal justice, and in work with older adults should collaboratively advance knowledge of the causes and impacts of SV against older adults along with knowledge on how to better support older survivors to encourage recovery and long, healthy lives [
1,
2].
4.4. Limitations
The data for this study were collected online, although several SV researchers prioritize in-person data collection. At the same time, online surveys offer an anonymous means of collecting data on sensitive socially taboo topics that participants may not want to discuss in person. Online surveys also remove scheduling problems for some participants. Yet their multidisciplinary insights are valuable, especially as limited studies exist in this area [
1,
2].
Participants who selected that they worked with older adults and/or with SV survivors in the survey and who indicated they were healthcare workers, social workers, long-term care workers, administrators or ombudsmen, SV agency workers, and law enforcement officers were included in the survey. While their responses aligned with their reported work type (e.g., participants who indicated they are social workers using person-first language, e.g., ‘adult with disabilities’ as opposed to ‘disabled’ and referencing mandated reporting, and law enforcement officers referring to an ‘assailant’ or ‘suspect’ when discussing the SV in later life they encountered) and they indicated that they worked with older adults or with survivors, there were no other steps taken to ensure that participants had in fact worked with older adults or survivors. Future research may benefit from further consideration of ways to further verify the reported responses of participants.
Another limitation is that data were collected from a mixed group of informants, some of whom had personal experience with SV. As SV in later life is a complex issue in need of further investigation, gathering information from a variety of professional sources, including those with lived experience, provided a broad perspective. However, limiting data collection to service providers from a single discipline may yield more targeted implications that should be considered in future research.
5. Conclusions
As the results of this study suggest, SV is a complex social issue that must be further explored and addressed, including in later life. Overarching themes from the participants’ responses surrounded (a) misconceptions of SV in later life and unique barriers to preventing it, (b) needs for further knowledge, awareness, research and education, (c) SV not being taken seriously, warranting further policy and resource development, (d) victim blame and internalized stigma, and (e) ageism, intersectional prejudice, and rape culture. To address the barriers to prevention noted by participants, multi-level prevention measures were recommended, such as individual and group counseling, peer support, organizational policy changes to keep older adults safe, and needs for changes in the ways SV is understood in society, including in later life. Moreover, emphasizing a life-course perspective in sexual education and education on community health needs could advance prevention in this area.
To further understand current needs for preventing SV in later life, more research is needed particularly with service providers who work directly with older adults and survivors. This could promote collaboration among healthcare and social service workers, social workers, law enforcement, and practitioners and administrators from later life and SV arenas. Such efforts have the potential to collectively and comprehensively advance prevention, which as the participants overwhelmingly highlighted, is still especially needed, particularly in later life.