New
Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items
from Amazon
Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Older Americans suffer serious access
limitations to exercise their Right to Vote
Newswise
— The US Senate Special Committee on Aging
held a hearing yesterday in Washington, DC,
on older Americans and the significant
barriers they face in exercising their right
to vote. Jason Karlawish, MD, associate
professor of Medicine and Medical Ethics at
the University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine, testified before the Committee,
citing results from a series of his studies
examining voting rights for the elderly.
Karlawish, a member of Penn’s Institute on
Aging who specializes in older adult health
care and related issues, recommends that to
help break down the logistical and
geographical voting barriers many older
Americans face, the United States must
develop a model for mobile polling.
“Elderly voters – especially elderly voters
who live in long-term care settings – are at
the mercy of others when it comes to
exercising their right to vote,” said
Karlawish.
Due to geographical distances, the lack of
transportation to polling sites, and the
lack of assistance to absentee ballot
applications, it is other people who decide
whether or not older Americans with issues
of mobility can vote.
Karlawish recommended that the US must
develop a model for mobile polling to
improve access to voting for older
Americans.
“Mobile polling means election
officials or equivalent groups visit
long-term facilities in their district prior
to registration deadlines to encourage and
solicit registrations,” said Karlawish.
“It
also means directly distributing ballots to
long-term facility residents, assisting with
voting, collecting ballet and ensuring their
return to a polling site.”r>
Successful models of mobile polling
currently exist in Australia and Canada,
where it is the norm. Karlawish also
proposed to the US Election Assistance
Commission to conduct research to develop a
set of best voting practices for long-term
care facilities, training for election
officials to implement them, and partner
ships between the Commission and states to
test their feasibility and refine them.
Neglecting the Voting Rights of Seniors
Election officials, said Karawish, have paid
limited attention to two key issues:
assuring that residents of long-term care
facilities have access to the ballot, and
preventing unscrupulous persons from
exploiting their vote.
Karlawish reported on the results of studies
of voting in long term care populations
conducted by him and his colleagues.
Twenty-nine states do not have voting
guidelines to accommodate residents of
long-term care facilities. According the
Karlawish, the convergence of four trends
underscores the need to address this issue:
1] The 2000 US presidential election clearly
demonstrated how very important elections
can be won by remarkably small numbers of
votes. “These razor-thing margins of victory
continue to foment concern about the
accuracy and legitimacy of every vote cast,”
said Karlawish.
2] Older Americans vote in larger numbers
than any other age group.
3] The older American population is growing
at an unprecendented rate. It is estimated
that between 2000 and 2030, the population
over 65 will more than double from 35 to
71.5 million.
4] An increasingly larger number of
Americans with cognitive impairments –
ranging from mild to severe – live in
long-term care settings such as assisted
living facilities and nursing homes. “our
surveys of Philadelphia and Virginia show
that in states without guidelines for voting
in long-term care, access to the polls is
largely determined by the practices and
attitudes of the long-term care staff,
typically social workers or activities
directors and those practices are inadequate
and they are unacceptable.”
Despite the current situation, Karlawish
told the Special Senate Committee, “You have
the precedent of Congressional efforts to
facilitate voting by people with
disabilities and to promote greater
uniformity in state electoral practices. You
also have the federal reach into nursing
homes through the regulations that govern
nursing home inspections and the quality of
care.”
For more on information on the studies
conducted by Karlawish and colleagues,
please go to
http://www.pennadc.org and click
on “Facilitating voting as people age:
addressing the challenges of cognitive
impairment.
About the Institute on Aging at the
University of Pennsylvania
The mission of the IOA is to improve the
health of the elderly by increasing the
quality and quantity of clinical and basic
research as well as educational programs
focusing on normal aging and age-related
diseases at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine and across the entire
Penn campus.
PENN Medicine is a $3.5 billion enterprise
dedicated to the related missions of medical
education, biomedical research, and
excellence in patient care. PENN Medicine
consists of the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine (founded in 1765 as the
nation's first medical school) and the
University of Pennsylvania Health System.
Penn's School of Medicine is currently
ranked #3 in the nation in U.S. News & World
Report's survey of top research-oriented
medical schools; and, according to most
recent data from the National Institutes of
Health, received over $379 million in NIH
research funds in the 2006 fiscal year.
Supporting 1,400 fulltime faculty and 700
students, the School of Medicine is
recognized worldwide for its superior
education and training of the next
generation of physician-scientists and
leaders of academic medicine.
The University of Pennsylvania Health System
includes three hospitals — its flagship
hospital, the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania, rated one of the nation’s
“Honor Roll” hospitals by U.S. News & World
Report; Pennsylvania Hospital, the nation's
first hospital; and Penn Presbyterian
Medical Center — a faculty practice plan; a
primary-care provider network; two
multi-specialty satellite facilities; and
home care and hospice.
...
...
...