20 September 2024
Care, dignity, and respect. They’re the very basics that every older person deserves, yet for many older Australians, particularly those within the LGBTI+ community, this is a reality still beyond reach.
Now, new research from the University of South Australia is shining a light on the lived experiences of LGBTI+ older adults navigating aged care in a push to create a more inclusive and supportive environment in which LGBTI+ individuals can age well.
Experienced occupational therapist, current UniSA PhD student, and this year’s UniSA Three Minute Thesis (3MT®) winner, Sarah McMullen-Roach, is spearheading the work, collating the global perceptions and views of more than 3500 LGBTI+ older adults to understand how this population views aged care.
“We have found that many LGBTI+ older adults experience a pervasive fear when considering aged care,” McMullen-Roach says.
“It’s such a powerful and consuming fear that, for many older LGBTI+ adults, the preferable alternative is often seen as suicide or voluntary assisted dying.
“While this population is incredibly resilient, for more than half their lives, it’s been illegal to simply be who they are. They’ve have had their identities criminalised, at times pathologized, and have lacked protection under the law.
“Now as they age, they are often forced with the stark reality that the majority of aged care is run by the same institutions that led the discrimination against them.”
The recent Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety outlined countless stories of neglect and abuse against the older LGBTI+ population, with neglect, abuse, indifference and poor-quality care identified across all aspects of aged care. Yet of the 148 recommendations that came out of the Royal Commission, not one addressed the needs of LGBTI+ older adults.
With a lack of information about the LGBTI+ population’s needs the claimed cause of the omission; research is clearly needed.
McMullen-Roach is now connecting with LGBTI+ older adults who are using aged care services to understand what is working, what is not, and what must change. She says that despite growing research in this area, that the voices of LGBTI+ older adults using care service largely remain unheard.
“This population fought for their identity and the rights that my generation now has, it is not acceptable that they are relegated to invisibility in their old age. My ambition with this work is that LGBTI+ people are not forced to age fearfully but supported to age fabulously.”
Notes to editors:
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Contact for interview: Sarah McMullen-Roach E: sarah.mcmullen-roach@unisa.edu.au
Media contact: Annabel Mansfield M: +61 479 182 489 E: Annabel.Mansfield@unisa.edu.au