I'm sorry. Thank you.
The current policy framework cannot adequately provide for the support and financial needs of aging people with disabilities. This has resulted in aging people with disabilities in situations of increased vulnerability, and a lack of access to appropriate services and supports in both the disability and the seniors sector.
Research has also clearly indicated that people with disabilities, particularly women with disabilities and seniors, are more likely than others to be subjected to acts of violence and/or to live in abusive situations. Numerous national and international research studies have confirmed that people with disabilities experience violence at a much higher rate than non-disabled populations. National and international research studies conducted over the last decade confirm that women with disabilities are abused at much higher rates than women without disabilities and than men with and without disabilities.
Studies indicate that women with disabilities are sexually assaulted at a rate at least twice that of the general population of women. The rate for women with intellectual disabilities and deaf women is even higher than for other women with disabilities. Almost 80% of women with disabilities have experienced physical violence by their intimate partners, compared to 29% of women without disabilities.
Research affirms that sexual offence is the most common type of abuse against women with disabilities. The nature of abuse against women with disabilities and deaf women differs from that in non-disabled populations due to systemic socio-economic exclusion and a related lack of appropriate supports and services. Like seniors, for women with disabilities there is an increased dependency on others for primary care and financial support, which makes them more vulnerable to abuse.
Internationally known researcher and disability rights activist from the John Dossetor Health Ethics Centre, in Alberta, Dr. Dick Sobsey, was consulted for his input into the fact-finding working group on older people with disabilities and abuse--this was in the Office for Disability Issues, in 2009-10--in which DAWN Canada was a primary participant. He identified the critical need to examine the prevalence and nature of elder abuse for people with disabilities for the primary purpose of using the information to obtain and develop tools and strategies for addressing it. Dr. Sobsey indicated that information on elder abuse and people with disabilities is grossly absent in the literature to date in Canada. He said, “This kind of research is very basic but it is badly needed in elder abuse studies.”
Developing safe and affordable housing options for older women with disabilities and assistance in the transition to independent living is an option that is preferable to residential or long-term care for seniors. It is a well-documented reality that institutional and congregated living settings for people with disabilities--particularly women--people with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities, and deaf people have been environments where abuse is widespread and ongoing. In addition, as I'm sure you have heard from other experts, elder abuse in seniors residences, long-term care facilities, and nursing homes has been identified over and over as a critical issue.
Ironically, the potential for abuse occurring in congregated or institutional settings occurs for the same reason for bringing people into such settings: the need for support with everyday living. Abuse can and does occur when other people are making decisions for the resident, where people's wishes are denied, and where attitudes and practices deny people their respect and dignity.
Older women with disabilities and deaf women are at a double disadvantage and are extremely vulnerable to abuse, with their increased need for health and social supports and different communication styles that often make it difficult to express themselves, and the lack of knowledge of how age-related conditions affect people with disabilities.
This excerpt from the Public Health Agency's “Seniors on the Margins” provides a good example of how the needs of older women with disabilities may result in increased vulnerability:
Differentiation between dementia, depression and those behaviours directly linked with the developmental disability is especially challenging, as is the difficulty the senior may have in expressing psychological problems. As well, there are few specialists with expertise in both developmental disability and psychogeriatrics.
This is the rationale behind the work of the disability movement in Canada, including the Community Living and Independent Living movements, which actively seek the inclusion of people with disabilities in living a safe and supported life in their communities, like other citizens. DAWN-RAFH Canada and the Canadian Association for Community Living have developed a national strategy that pursues this objective by implementing a local-level community development approach that operates on all levels--municipal, provincial, territorial, and federal--and in all key sectors to develop a coordinated response to addressing the issue of abuse of older people with disabilities and the elderly deaf, with DAWN focusing particularly on women.
The Government of Canada, through the federal departments of Status of Women Canada and Justice Canada, is acknowledging the critical need to address the issue of violence against people with disabilities and deaf women and has demonstrated this support by working closely with the Canadian Association of Community Living and DAWN Canada in the development of a pan-Canadian initiative entitled “Preventing and Responding to Violence in the Lives of People with Disabilities and Deaf People”.
This strategy would bring the key sectors and people with disabilities together in local communities to assist in the development of sector-specific tools and activities that will address the issue of abuse against people with disabilities. DAWN-RAFH Canada and CACL, the Canadian Association for Community Living, came together earlier this year, with support from the Canadian Women's Foundation, because of the critical need to address the alarming rates of violence that people with disabilities, particularly women with disabilities and deaf women, are experiencing throughout Canada.
Currently many women with disabilities and deaf women are unaware of their rights, are not being appropriately protected from violence, and are not able to access and fully participate in the systems that are there to prosecute their abusers. DAWN-RAFH Canada and CACL are aiming to address this issue as soon as possible in order to put an end to the violence that is too often a part of the lives of people with disabilities.
In summary, older women with disabilities and deaf senior women face multiple risks of abuse, yet elder abuse in these populations has not been examined or addressed in any practical and effective manner. DAWN-RAFH Canada and the Canadian Association for Community Living are proposing a cross-ministerial, cross-sectoral strategy that aims to combat the many manifestations of violence and abuse that women with disabilities and deaf women in Canada are experiencing.
We ask you to ensure that women with disabilities and deaf women are empowered to protect themselves from abuse and discrimination and that public policies, programs, and funding reflect the stated value through legislation with impact and regulatory power.
We will be happy to expand on these points in any questions you have. We thank you for your time and for this opportunity. We ask that you use us and call on us as we work together for equality for all Canadians through addressing the issues of women with disabilities.
Thank you.