Sadly, 60% of Alzheimer’s patients will wander away from home at some point during the duration of the disease. When dementia patients are missing for over 72 hours, 80% will not make it back home alive. When you consider that 5 million people suffer from dementia or Alzheimer’s, that is a staggering number of lost dementia patients. It’s also particularly worrisome during the extreme summer heat waves that most of Ohio has been facing.

One of the largest senior in-home care companies, Senior Helpers, has launched a program called the “Lost and Found Action Plan.” This plan provides a checklist for the families of elderly loved ones that can literally save lives.

  1. Provide elderly family members with a smart phone, and create an “If I am lost” folder on the front screen. In the folder include contact information for family members, 911, a cab company’s phone number and the home address of the senior.
  2. Install a GPS app on the phone, and make sure a GPS is in the car. Be certain that elder family members demonstrate the use of the GPS programs.
  3. Make plastic laminate cards with all of the senior’s personal information and emergency contacts. Place on in the wallet, and one on the car visor.
  4. Encourage them to wear ID bracelets, which come in many fashionable designs.

For Dementia Patients:

  1. Disguise doors in the home by placing pictures or posters on the doors to deter dementia patients from walking out.
  2. Place door chimes on all doors that have access to the outside to alert family members of an attempted walk out.
  3. Have a list of all previous residence and job locations accessible to caregivers. Dementia patients often return to former homes or places of employment.
  4. Consider a GPS device that can be tracked, and place it in shoes or around an ankle or wrist.