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. 2020 Sep 24;15(9):e0239560. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0239560

Table 1. Characteristics of included studies.

First author Publication year Study location–country (region) Research question(s) Sample (number, age range) Data collection method and analysis method Type(s) of violence and perpetrator(s)
Agoff 2006 Mexico (AMRO) To identify personal, cultural, and institutional factors that hinder resolution of domestic violence, to identify factors that facilitate the violence. 26; Age range: 26–72 Open-ended face-to-face interview; analysis guided by grounded theory, focusing on two aspects: subjective perceptions of violence and barriers to overcoming violence IPV–any type
Male partner
Ayres 2001 United States (AMRO) How do you define the concept of abuse within the context of ageing women who are at risk for or experiencing physical or emotional injury inflicted by elderly family members for whom they provide care? 11 Transcripts of first session of a community-based intervention; concept analysis Elder abuse–Verbal, physical, emotional abuse
50 and older for caregiver; 55 and older for elderly family member Elderly family member receiving care (spouses or parents)
Band-Winterstein 2009 Israel (EURO) How is intimate violence shaped and how does it change throughout the lives of older battered women? How is continuous IPV experienced in old age and how age and violence interact and change throughout the life span 40 couples; Age range: 60–84 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; content analysis IPV–Physical, emotional, economic, psychological
Male partner
Band-Winterstein 2010 Israel (EURO) What are the unique experiences of old battered women from the dimensions of intentionality of the body in time and space? 25; Age range: 60–84 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; content analysis IPV–physical, emotional
Male partners
Band-Winterstein 2010 Israel (EURO) What are various perceptions of the attempts to forgive others and the self throughout this lifelong process, as described by older women who have lived with intimate partner violence? What are the lived experiences of forgiveness of older abused women throughout a life of IPV? 21; Age range: 60–80 Face-to-face semi-structured in-depth interviews; content analysis IPV–physical, emotional
Male partners
Band- Winterstein 2012 Israel (EURO) Explore the constructions of aging in intimate partner violence as narratives of couplehood or narratives of old age; explore how couples, who are living in lifelong IPV, constructed aging in IPV. N = 30 (15 couples, n = 15 women) Face-to-face in-depth interviews; dyadic analysis approach focused on identifying overlap and contrast in the couple data; analyzed transcripts as whole life story, then performed separate categorical-content analysis consistent with the narrative approach. IPV–physical, sexual
Male partner Age range: 62–84
Band-Winterstein 2014 Israel (EURO) How do parents experience their aging process in the context of being abused by their adult children with mental disorder? How do they describe the influence of the aging process on the relationship dynamics? How does living in such shared reality impacts their aging needs? 16 parents (11 mothers); Age range: 58–94 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; content analysis in phenomenological method Family violence—physical, emotional abuse, financial, neglect
Adult children with mental disorders
Band- Winterstein 2015 Israel (EURO) What is the lived experience of elderly women with lifelong IPV? 31 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; phenomenological analysis IPV–physical, sexual, emotional, economic
Age range: 60–84 Male partner
Band- Winterstein 2015 Israel (EURO) What are the subjective experiences of family members involved in violent, abusive, and neglecting relationships? 11 dyads (parent and child); Age range of parents: 65–90 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; thematic analysis–identifying the basic components of the experience and placing them into units of meaning according to the study aim, coding and conceptualizing into unique theoretical categories, and organizing main themes and describing the reciprocal relations between them Family violence/ elder abuse–physical violence, verbal aggression, financial exploitation, and forms of neglect.
What is an abusive relationship? What does it mean to suffer? What are the perceptions of those who are being abused? What are the elements that make life in abuse possible? How do actors involved in the drama of abuse give coherence of their life? Child
Band-Winterstein 2019 Israel (EURO) To differentiate between the lived experience of two groups of women caregiving for a partner with dementia; One group was coping with lifelong IPV and dementia-related violence (Group 1); the other group was coping with dementia-related violence only (Group 2). 16; Age range: 63–84 In-depth, semi-structured face-to-face phenomenological interviews; Interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) IPV–physical, sexual, verbal
Male partner
Barbosa 2015 Brazil (AMRO) To understand the impact of sexual violence suffered by women with mental disorders based on self-reports of these experiences. 17; Age range: 18–68 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; structured narration analysis IPV–sexual, physical
Bhatia 2019 India (SEARO) To unearth the causes of partner violence in later life, to understand the patterns of partner violence in later life and to understand psychological and social consequences faced by women undergoing partner violence in later life. 38; Age range: 50 and above Face-to-face in-depth interviews (4) and focus group discussions (2); Analysis methods not described IPV and family violence–physical, emotional, financial
Husband, male partner, other relatives
Buchbinder 2003 Israel (EURO) Describe and analyze the experiences and perceptions of older battered women in coping with and surviving the violence. 20; Age range: 60–80 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; content analysis in phenomenological method IPV–physical, psychological, and sexual
Male partner
Chane 2015 Ethiopia (AFRO) What is the lived experience of abused elders and how can we increase understanding of elder abuse? 15 (9 women); Age range: 64–93 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; interpretative phenomenological analysis informed by hermeneutic phenomenology Family violence/ elder abuse–financial, physical, psychological
Family members, community members
Chane 2015 Ethiopia (AFRO) What are the types and nature of abuse and neglect from the perspective of elders in Ethiopia who experienced abuse in noninstitutional settings? 15 total, 9 women; 64–85 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; coding following interpretative phenomenological analysis approach Family violence/ elder abuse–financial, physical, psychological
Family members, community members
Cheung 2015 Hong Kong (WPRO) How does IPV victimization manifest itself among older women? 2; 63 and 69 Not described; not described IPV–Verbal, physical, controlling behaviours, financial, emotional
Male partners
Cronin 2013 USA (AMRO) How do women make meaning with their experiences with domestic violence; The focus of this study is women’s lives after violence, and the ways in which they have coped with the challenges of living and aging. 15; Age range: 60–89 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; narrative life history approach to coding IPV–Physical controlling behaviours, verbal, emotional, financial control
Male partners
de Menezes 2013 Brazil (AMRO) To analyze the aggressive behavior in the relationship between elderly with symptoms of dementia and their family caregivers. 4 couples–each pair aggressor and caregiver; Age range of caregivers: 68–77 Semi-structured interviews; thematic content analysis IPV and family violence–physical, threats, psychological
Elderly receiving care
Eisikovits 2015 Israel (EURO) What are the ways in which young and old battered women perceive, understand and experience suffering from violence, how do they build these experiences into the central theme of their life and how do they reconstruct them in a manner that makes their lives livable? 17; Age range: 60–84 Semi-structured in-depth interviews; content analysis IPV–physical, psychological
Male partners, husbands
Fakari 2013 Iran (EMRO) Describe daily life experience (of violence against older women) just in the same way they occurred in reality. 13; mean age 62 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; “holistic methods of analysis” IPV and elder abuse–physical and psychological, financial exploitation
Not stated
Grunfeld 1996 Canada (AMRO) How does violence impact the lives of elderly women? 4; Age range: 63–73 Face-to-face open-ended in-depth interviews; thematic analysis IPV and family violence–physical, emotional, financial, controlling behaviours
Husbands, children and grandchildren
Guruge 2010 Canada (AMRO) What are older immigrant women’s experiences and responses to abuse and neglect? 43; Age range: 48–85 In-depth interviews and focus group discussions IPV and family violence–emotional, physical, sexual, financial abuse, neglect, controlling behaviours
Husbands, children, children-in-law
Hightower 2006 Canada (AMRO) What is the experience of violence and abuse of women aged 50 and older? 64; Age range: 50–87 Interviews and group sessions; not described IPV and family violence–financial, sexual, physical, emotional/ psychological, controlling behaviours
Male partners and other family members
Lazenbatt 2013 UK (EURO) How do older women with an abusive partner for more than 30 years cope with domestic violence and how does it affect their wellbeing? 18; Age range: 53–72 Face-to-face semi-structured in-depth interviews; thematic analysis IPV–physical, psychological, controlling behaviours
Male partner
Lazenbatt 2014 UK (EURO) How ‘older women’ cope with domestic violence and how it affects their wellbeing, using a theoretical framework of ‘salutogenesis’ to consider coping resources used in lifelong abuse 18; Age range: 53–72 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; thematic framework analysis based on ‘salutogenesis’ theoretical dimensions were used to explore their ‘wellbeing and coping’ IPV–physical, psychological/ emotional abuse, sexual abuse, financial exploitation
Male partner
Lichtenstein 2009 United States (AMRO) To identify barriers to reporting domestic violence to law enforcement among older African American women in the rural south. How does age, ethnicity, and gender intersect with rurality and systems such as old boys’ networks in creating barriers to reporting domestic violence to law enforcement? 15; Age range: 50–84 Focus group discussions (2); constant comparison method IPV–physical, verbal
Husband
Lowenstein 1999 Israel (EURO) To describe possible reasons for the phenomenon of elder spousal abuse in second marriages, and to identify possible risk factors for abuse based on reports by remarried elderly who were victims of spousal abuse 12 couples, of which 9 of the women were victims of spousal abuse; 60+ Face-to-face in-depth interviews; coding–not described further IPV–physical, controlling/ psychological
Partners
McGarry 2010 United Kingdom (EURO) What are women’s experiences of domestic abuse and what is its effect on their health and lives? 16; Age range: 59–84 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; iterative approach and informed by the analytic hierarchy model IPV–physical, emotional, sexual, Male partner
McGarry 2014 United Kingdom (EURO) What are the service responses to abuse among older people across a range of sectors? What are the perspectives of older people either as survivors of abuse or as older people with an interest in service development? 3; Age range: 60–65 Semi-structured phone interviews; Analytic Hierarchy Mode and constant comparative method Elder abuse, family violence and IPV
Any
Montminy 2005 Canada (AMRO) How is psychological violence against older women experienced in the marital context? 15; Age range: 60–81 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; manifest content analysis IPV–psychological
Male partner
Nahmiash 2004 Canada (AMRO) What is the interacting relationship between the environmental context of care giving and abuse and neglect of older adults. 16 participants (14 victims, 2 abusers); 12 of the 14 victims were female; Age range: 61–78 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; content analysis Elder abuse–sexual, physical
Care-givers and/ or partners
Pillemer 2011 USA (AMRO) What are the major forms of resident to resident aggression that occur in nursing homes? 53 units in 3 facilities, 122 events identified; no age range specified Identified all resident-to-resident aggression events in several nursing homes over 2 week period through resident interview, certified nursing assistant interview, and interviewer observation; sorted events into categories Elder abuse
Other residents or nursing homes
Ramsey-Klawsnik 2003 USA (AMRO) What are the patterns of elder sexual abuse, both marital and incestuous? What are the abuse dynamics, problems confronting victims, and perpetrator characteristics? 130 cases (consultation files); not specified Review of consultation files from Protective Services Program of the Massachusetts Executive Office of Elder Affairs; analysis method not described beyond “qualitatively analysed” IPV and elder abuse–sexual
Partner, caregiver, family members
Richards 2013 Uganda (AFRO) How women’s and men’s gendered experiences from childhood to old age have shaped their vulnerability in relation to HIV both in terms of their individual risk of HIV and their access to and experiences of HIV services Total 31; 16 women. Age range: 60 and over Face-to-face in-depth interviews and FGDs; framework approach to coding IPV–physical, sexual and psychological
Male partners
Roberto 2013 USA (AMRO) What are the issues facing rural older women who wish to lead safe and violence-free lives and to identify the com-munity support needed to help them successfully rebuild their lives. 10; Age range: 54–70 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; not described IPV–emotional, physical and sexual
Male partners
Roberto 2018 USA (AMRO) How women experienced IPV over the course of their lives and in different contexts; what resources were helpful when older women exited abusive partnerships 10; Age range: 54–70 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; open coding and focused coding IPV–Emotional, physical, financial exploitation
Male partners
Ron 1999 Israel (EURO) What are the main factors, particularly social factors such as the need for intimacy and sexuality, which cause tension among elderly remarried couples and lead to abuse by the spouses? 12 couples, of which 9 of the women were victims of spousal abuse; 60+ Face-to-face in-depth interviews; coding–not described further IPV–verbal, emotional, physical, financial exploitation, caregiver neglect
Partner
Rosen 2019 United States (AMRO) To analyze legal records to describe in detail acute precipitants of physical elder abuse. 87 cases; Age range: 60–95 Analyzed narratives from police reports of acute physical elder abuse; cross-case analysis of narratives in police reports to identify codes, coded narratives IPV and family violence–physical
Child, spouse/ companion, grand child
Ruelas-Gonzalez 2014 Mexico (AMRO) To analyze health care providers and older patients’ perceptions about elder abuse by health personnel of public health services. 6 older women; Age range: 65–87 Semi-structured interviews; analysis using grounded theory approach, content analysis. Elder abuse–neglect, psychological violence, discrimination
Health care professionals and caregivers
Schaffer 2008 Australia (WPRO) What are the needs of older and isolated women who live with domestic violence? 90; Age range: 50–78 Phone-in–asked women to call in and tell their stories to a nation-wide call in service; some “personal” and “group” interviews; analysis method not described IPV–type(s) not specified
Male partner
Sawin 2011 USA (AMRO) What are the experiences of older women diagnosed with breast cancer while experiencing intimate partner abuse? 11; Age range: 51–84 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; coding following hermeneutic phenomenological strategy of inquiry IPV–financial control, psychological control
Male partner
Smith 2015 USA (AMRO) How older women/mothers understand and respond to their adult children who are abusive and/or “difficult”; How older low-income women make sense of their adult children’s problems. 15; Age Range: 62 and older Face-to-face in-depth interviews; coding (type not specified) Family violence–disrespect, physical and psychological
Adult child
Souto 2015 Brazil (AMRO) What are older Brazilian women’s experiences of psychological domestic violence? How do older Brazilian women experience their daily life when they are victims of psychological domestic violence? How do older Brazilian women respond to psychological domestic violence? What are older Brazilian women’s needs, expectations, and aims in dealing with the psychological domestic violence in their lives? 11; Age range: 66–85 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; Schutz’s motivation theory used as framework for thematic coding Family violence and IPV–psychological violence, including verbal abuse, financial abuse, neglect
Male partner, family members
Souto 2019 Canada (AMRO) How is IPV experienced by Portuguese-speaking older immigrant women? How is women’s daily life related to IPV? How does this group respond to IPV situations? What are these women’s needs, expectations, and aims in dealing with IPV? 10; Age range: 60–81 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; Schutz’s motivation theory used as framework for thematic coding IPV–physical, sexual, emotional, economic abuse, controlling behaviours
Male partner
Spencer 2019 Canada (AMRO) How family carers of persons with cognitive impairment respond to fear, intimidation, and violence, over time and across different settings 10; Age range: 23–83, median age 64 (only results attributed to women aged 50 and above included in review analysis) Participants kept weekly diary of interactions with person for who they provided care, and follow-up interview following completion of diary; narrative analysis IPV and family violence–physical, verbal, emotional
Husband with dementia (7); mother (3)
Teaster 2006 USA (AMRO) What is the trajectory of, and community responses to, violence in late life? Aim is to further understanding of IPV in rural communities by examining responses to violence from the perspective of aging women, as well as those entities intervening in their cases (e.g., APS caseworkers, women’s shelters, law enforcement). 10: Age range: 50–69 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; open coding and then applied coding scheme developed IPV–controlling behaviours, physical, verbal, emotional
Male partners
Tetterton 2011 USA (AMRO) What are effective interventions for women above the age of 60 who have experienced IPV? What are the experiences of older women who experienced IPV? 1; Age range: 63–65 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; generated case studies from data and used phenomenological approach to conduct thematic analysis IPV and family violence–physical, emotional
Male partner and adult son
Yan 2015 Hong Kong (WPRO) What are the factors associated with help-seeking behaviors among mistreated elders in Hong Kong? 40 total, 26 women; Age range: 60–81 Face-to-face in-depth interviews; grounded theory approach to coding IPV and family violence–physical, psychological, neglect, financial exploitation, sexual
Partner, family members
Zink 2003 USA (AMRO) What are older women’s reasons for remaining in abusive relationships? 36; Age range: 55–90 Interviews–some face-to-face, some on telephone; coded using thematic analysis techniques IPV–physical, emotional, sexual, financial abuse
Male partner
Zink 2004 USA (AMRO) What are the experiences and needs of older victims of IPV in the health care setting? 38; Age range: 55–90 Interviews–some face-to-face, some on telephone; coded using immersion crystallization technique IPV–physical, emotional, financial, sexual
Male partner
Zink 2006 USA (AMRO) What are: (a) the types of abuse perpetrated by older men against their spouses or dating partners and (b) the victim’s interpretation of these experiences and behaviors? 38; Age range: 54–90 Interviews–some face-to-face, some on telephone; coded using thematic analysis techniques IPV–physical, emotional, sexual, financial abuse
Male partner
Zink 2006 USA (AMRO) How older women cope in long-term abusive intimate relationships. 38; Age range: 55–90 Interviews–some face-to-face, some on telephone; adapted form of grounded theory IPV–physical, emotional, verbal
Husband, boyfriend, partner