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Alzheimer's Disease: Handling Wandering Behavior

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  • Remove clutter and clear the pathways from room to room to allow the person with AD to move about more freely.

  • Make sure floors provide good traction for walking or pacing. Use nonskid floor wax or leave floors unpolished. Secure all rug edges, eliminate throw rugs, or install nonskid strips. The person with AD should wear nonskid shoes or sneakers.

  • Place locks on exit doors high or low out of direct sight. Consider double locks that require a key. Keep a key for yourself and hide one near the door for emergency exit purposes.

  • Use loosely fitting doorknob covers so that the covers turn instead of the actual knob. Due to the potential hazard they could cause if an emergency exit is needed, locked doors and doorknob covers should be used only when a caregiver is present.

  • Install safety devices found in hardware stores to limit the distance that windows can be opened.

  • If possible, secure the yard with fencing and a locked gate. Use door alarms such as loose bells above the door or devices that ring when the doorknob is touched or the door is opened.

  • Divert the attention of the person with AD away from using the door by placing small scenic posters on the door; placing removable gates, curtains, or brightly colored streamers across the door; or wallpapering the door to match any adjoining walls.

  • Place STOP, DO NOT ENTER, or CLOSED signs in strategic areas on doors.

  • Reduce clues that symbolize departure such as shoes, keys, suitcases, coats, or hats.

  • Obtain a medical alert bracelet for the person with AD with the words “memory loss” inscribed along with an emergency telephone number. Place the bracelet on the person’s dominant hand to limit the possibility of removal, or solder the bracelet closed.

  • Place labels in garments to aid in identification. Check with the local Alzheimer’s Association about the Safe Return program.

  • Keep an article of the person’s worn, unwashed clothing in a plastic bag to aid in finding someone with the use of dogs.

  • Notify neighbors of the person’s potential to wander or become lost. Alert them to contact you or the police immediately if the individual is seen alone and on the move.

  • Give local police, neighbors, and relatives a recent picture, along with the name and pertinent information about the person with AD, as a precaution should he or she become lost. Keep extra pictures on hand.

  • Consider making an up-to-date home video of the person with AD.

  • Do not leave a person with AD who has a history of wandering unattended.

AUTHOR: Joan Yuhas McGowan
MORE INFO: Excerpted from "Living with Alzheimer's Disease: Hope and Information"

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GRANDPARENTING:   Grandparenting  |  Grandparents' Rights
PERSONAL LIFE:   Depression in the Elderly  |  Retired  |  Sexuality After 50  |  Sharpening Your Memory  |  Surviving Widowhood  |  Funeral Planning
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HEALTH AND WELLNESS:   Depression in the Elderly  |  Daily Living Aids  |  Sharpening Your Memory  |  Driving While Elderly  |  Sexuality After 50  |  Important Legal Documents  |  Living with Alzheimer's Disease  |  Lifetime Fitness  |  Breast Cancer
HOME AND GARDEN:   Household Tips  |  Daily Living Aids  |  Canine Companions
PRESERVING MEMORIES:   Memoir Writing  |  Genealogy and Heraldry  |  My Important Information  |  Preserving Family Memories  |  Digital Cameras
HOUSING OPTIONS:   Senior Housing Options  |  Assisted Living
LEGAL/FINANCIAL:   Important Legal Documents  |  My Important Information  |  Grandparents' Rights  |  Bargains for Seniors  |  Driving While Elderly  |  Funeral Planning  |  Wills and Trusts  |  Mutual Funds
TECHNOLOGY:   It's Your Internet Too  |  Digital Cameras  |  Cell Phones
INDEX OF ALL TITLES