1. Make the abuse of older people a strategic priority.
If later life abuse sits only on the margins of safeguarding plans, older people risk becoming invisible. A dedicated priority, action plan or multi-agency group can help ensure the issue receives the attention it deserves.
2. Improve local data collection.
Prevention depends on understanding the scale and nature of the problem. Councils should know how many older people are experiencing abuse, how many safeguarding concerns involve family members, and how often issues such as coercive control, economic abuse or abuse by adult children are occurring locally.
3. Invest in training and awareness.
Safer ageing starts with recognising abuse and understanding its impact. Older victim-survivors often face unique barriers to disclosure, including dependency on the person causing harm, fear of losing their home, or concerns about burdening family members. Building awareness across the workforce helps create more opportunities to identify risk and intervene early.
4. Strengthen multi-agency working.
Abuse rarely fits neatly within organisational boundaries. Effective responses require adult safeguarding, housing, health services, domestic abuse specialists and community organisations to work together around the needs of older people.
5. Invest in public awareness.
Prevention relies on people recognising abuse and knowing where to seek support. Many older people do not identify their experiences as abuse, particularly where the perpetrator is a family member or trusted individual. Public awareness campaigns can help change that.
We think creating communities where people can age better means creating communities where people can age safely. As our population ages, safer ageing should not be viewed as a niche safeguarding concern. It should be recognised as a fundamental part of healthy ageing itself. By focusing on prevention, improving awareness and building systems that protect and empower older people, local authorities can help ensure that later life is defined not by vulnerability, but by dignity, independence and security.
Hourglass is the only UK-wide charity dedicated to stopping the abuse, harm, exploitation and neglect of older people.
Their free, confidential helpline is available 24/7 on 0808 808 8141.