Every American deserves the chance to live out the full measure of their days in  health and security.  Yet, every year, millions of older Americans are denied  that most basic opportunity due to abuse, neglect, or exploitation.  On World  Elder Abuse Awareness Day, we call attention to this global public health issue,  and we rededicate ourselves to providing our elders the care and protection they  deserve. 
Victims of elder abuse are parents and grandparents,  neighbors and friends.  Elder abuse cuts across race, gender, culture, and  circumstance, and whether physical, emotional, or financial, it takes an  unacceptable toll on individuals and families across our Nation.  Seniors who  experience abuse or neglect face a heightened risk of health complications and  premature death, while financial exploitation can rob men and women of the  security they have built over a lifetime.  Tragically, many older Americans  suffer in silence, burdened by fear, shame, or impairments that prevent them  from speaking out about abuse.
We owe it to our seniors to expose elder abuse wherever we find it and take  action to bring it to an end.  Two years ago, I was proud to sign the Elder  Justice Act, which was included in the Affordable Care Act, and marked a major  step forward in the fight against elder abuse, neglect, and exploitation.  With  the Department of Health and Human Services, we are partnering with State and  local authorities to ensure seniors can live their lives with dignity and  independence.  With the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, we are working to  empower older Americans with tools and information to navigate safely through  financial challenges.  And with the Department of Justice, we are protecting  older Americans by prosecuting those who would target and exploit them.
Every day, State and local agencies, protective services professionals, law  enforcement officers, private and non profit organizations, and leaders  throughout our communities help protect older Americans from abuse and provide  care to those who have already been affected.  Together, all of us can play a  role in addressing this public health crisis that puts millions at risk.  Today,  let us keep faith with a generation of Americans by speaking out against elder  abuse, advancing justice for victims, and building a Nation that preserves and  protects the well being of all who call it home.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America,  by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the  United States, do hereby proclaim June 15, 2012, as World Elder Abuse Awareness  Day.  I call upon all Americans to observe this day by learning the signs of  elder abuse, neglect, and exploitation, and by raising awareness about this  public health issue.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this fourteenth day of June,  in the year of our Lord two thousand twelve, and of the Independence of the  United States of America the two hundred and thirty-sixth.
Presidential Proclamation -- World Elder Abuse Awareness Day, 2012 | The White House