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annalyzer
03-14-2009, 03:24 PM
http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/dpp/news/local/hillsborough/Alzheimers_031409

Alzheimer's often undiagnosed
Experts say most patients will try to wander away

Saturday, 14 Mar 2009

It is believed that a 75-year-old woman found dead along the side of Interstate 75 Friday might have wandered off from a relative's home in Ruskin because she was in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease.

As many as five million people are living with Alzheimer's. The Alzheimer's Association says most people living in the hazy grip of the disease will wander off from home at some point and that most are sure to do it repeatedly.

"It was the worst day in my life when we discovered that my father was missing," said Charlotte Howard, describing the day her father drove off from his home in Tampa and vanished.

The family hoped for the best and feared the worst.

"We really did not know that he was that bad," she said.

Nancy Parente with the Alzheimer's Association says it happens all the time: families think loved ones are simply old and forgetful, when really they're suffering from an illness unraveling their brains, rendering them confused and vulnerable. She says cases are on the rise.

"We can provide testing and it's a diagnostic tool, which pretty much will let us know if we see some kind of change with memory," said Parente.

Caregivers can take steps to prevent wandering. Parente says part of it is "getting into" the mind of an Alzheimer's patient. For instance, they often perceive dark colors as empty space or giant voids.

"If you place a dark rug, preferably a black rug in front of a doorway, the individual will not cross that rug. He or she will think of it as perhaps a hole that he or she might fall through," said Parente.

A home alarm is also a good idea, along with securing windows and doors.

"Someone with Alzheimer's Disease is going to be looking eye level, so if you're able to get some locks and you can place them above and below," she said.

The Alzheimer's Association wants families to know about its Safe Return ID bracelet. It lists medical information and gives a number to call that will locate loved ones.

Charlotte Howard's father was found alive, in his car in Naples.
"A person in a gas station thought he was a drunk, so they let him lay there all day," Howard said.

Parente says we all need to do out part in watching out for each other.

"It's community awareness, because even if someone is homeless, I would think you would move forward, and at least try to ascertain what his or her situation is, especially if someone is older and wandering."

The Alzheimer's Association offers classes to help caregivers.

Roamer
03-14-2009, 03:26 PM
It's a terrible disease. I had two family members with it, and it's hard to even describe the pain we all went through, knowing there was literally nothing we could do to help them.

annalyzer
03-14-2009, 03:28 PM
Note to mods ~ I put this article here though I think it would help our viewers most in the information and support section since we have so many people coming up missing who are suffering from dementia/Alzheimer's. We can add more articles as how to help people prevent their loved ones from wandering off. It's up to you.

annalyzer
03-14-2009, 03:29 PM
It's a terrible disease. I had two family members with it, and it's hard to even describe the pain we all went through, knowing there was literally nothing we could do to help them.

My mom died of AD last year here at my home.

Roamer
03-14-2009, 03:54 PM
I remember when it happened, Anna. I felt so bad, because I really knew what you were going through.

I think you have a good idea, and I'll be happy to move the thread.

rockford2
03-14-2009, 07:42 PM
What scares me about this disease is if you care for a person with Alzheimers and they don't remember you, what if they try to harm the caretaker, thinking we are burglars or bad people?

We just HAVE to find a cure for this disease!! To not remember is such a very scary thing and very difficult on the caretakers. Anna? I am very sorry about your Mother.

annalyzer
04-21-2009, 01:32 AM
ID scans help keep an eye out for Oklahoma seniors

SafetyMethod is considered 15 times more accurate than fingerprinting

Published: April 21, 2009

Free iris scans are being offered in the metro area, and officials hope the new technology will help identify senior Alzheimer’s disease or dementia sufferers who wander off.

http://photos.newsok.com/2/showimage/560297/medium
Optometrist Travis Yadon scans the irises of Daily Living Center client Doris Stevens. The image will go into a database that aims to help identify missing senior citizens who may have Alzheimer’s disease or dementia.

The photographs are stored by Senior Safety Net, a database maintained by the National Center for Missing Adults. Participation is voluntary.

On Monday, several dozen senior citizens at the South Daily Living Center in Oklahoma City agreed to free scans from the Oklahoma Association of Optometric Physicians and the Oklahoma Sheriffs’ Association.

Each participant looked into a binoculars-like camera, and a photo was downloaded onto a computer. The technology can tell between identical twins, and even an individual’s right and left eye.

"It is 15 times more accurate than fingerprinting,” optometrist Max Venard said.

Venard said the device converts 220 characteristics of a person’s iris into a unique bar code.

Irises do not change with aging, so scans never need updating, he said.

The same technology is used by the optometrists’ group and state sheriff’s departments for a missing-child database.

"We are taking the lead again in giving Oklahoma families dealing with aging loved ones, who may have memory loss, the added security of knowing this important information will be in a national database in case they are ever lost,” said Saundra Naifeh, executive director of the Oklahoma Association of Optometric Physicians.

http://newsok.com/id-scans-help-keep-an-eye-out-for-seniors/article/3363230

Louise
04-30-2009, 05:24 PM
What scares me about this disease is if you care for a person with Alzheimers and they don't remember you, what if they try to harm the caretaker, thinking we are burglars or bad people?

We just HAVE to find a cure for this disease!! To not remember is such a very scary thing and very difficult on the caretakers. Anna? I am very sorry about your Mother.

I know, it is one of the most awful things a family can go through watching their loved ones detiorate through this. My paternal grandmother had it and before my parents moved them into a nursing home, she often used to beat my grandfather because she didn't recognize him sometimes due to her dementia and thought he was a stranger. She passed away in 2003 due to complications resulting from it. My grandfather's death in 2000 was a result of Alzheimers & Parkinsons.