Abstract

Personal economic stability is one of the core social determinants of health and longevity, and managing one's finances is an instrumental activity of daily living. Impaired financial decision-making can lead to poor health, emotional distress, and loss of independence and safety. Older adults in the United States lose billions of dollars annually to elder financial abuse (EFA), which may be preceded by a decline of capacity to make financial decisions. A literature review regarding EFA, electronic financial instruments (EFI), medical and financial decision-making capacity evaluations, and biomedical ethics was performed. Currently, there is no gold standard clinical assessment tool for evaluating financial capacity. The instruments in use have yet to formally integrate modern EFI that present novel mechanisms through which EFA can occur. This article summarizes the current state of EFA in the United States, risk factors and strategies for prevention, and offers a clinician administered screening questionnaire for addressing EFI use along with a semi-structured approach to clinical financial capacity assessments.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call