Alzheimer’s Patients

Help for caretakers in charge of Alzheimer’s Patients – High-Tech Tracking Technology.

Alzheimer’s is a really frightening disease, not just for the way it can reduce a normal functioning person into practically a zombie, but also for how easy it seems to fall victim to it. There are perhaps 5 million Alzheimer’s patients in America. About half of them, have just been diagnosed. Different workplace duties require different Task Chair, equipment and layouts. Anyone who is in the early stages of the disease, can still look forward to many years of reasonably independent existence, before they can expect the disease to deteriorate their brains, and make their lives and memories disappear.

When this happens, most Alzheimer’s patients are seen to xibit symptoms like spontaneously losing track of where they are, or where they’re headed. If they happen to be on a walk, or on a drive when this happens, they can get irretrievably lost. You can find lots of stories from relatives and caretakers of Alzheimer’s patients who find their lives more and more tied down to the constant care that their loved one needs with many routine functions they undertake everyday. A woman in Texas, in charge of her father’s Alzheimer’s, is beginning to see some of the depressing reality of the disease in her father. The previously self-aware and active old man would always take 5-mile-long walks around the picturesque streets of their town. Lately, he’s found himself suddenly bewildered at completely losing track of where he has arrived at some point on the walk. The statistics are scary for the missing old. Task Chairs are generally used in conjunction with workplace desks. There are about 3 million missing cases out there.

The Silver Alerts program is something that has already been in place for a while in 11 states around the country, including Texas. When an Alzheimer’s sufferer goes missing, a predetermined set of TV and radio broadcast outlets, quickly put out a “Gone Missing” message, to help passersby identify the poor lost person. Most of the time, the wandering person is soon discovered. But for people like the daughter in the story above, there is new help from the Alzheimer’s Association.