Missing Elderly Man with Dementia

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Think It Through AMAURY MURGADO

MISSING ELDERLY MAN WITH DEMENTIA A septuagenarian Alzheimer's sufferer walks off in the middle of the night. How will you respond?

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SITUATION

n every call for service, you should think things through before you begin your response. Each call can be broken down into three phases: pre-response, response, and postresponse. The following scenario is designed to help you think things through rather than give you a specific way to handle the call.

You get a call about a missing elderly white male who left

his residence somewhere between 21:00 and 04:00 while his caregiver was sleeping. The gentleman is 74 years old and expected to be walking in dress clothes. He has a habit of wandering off but lately the problem has compounded because he has been diagnosed with dementia and is in the early stages of Alzheimer's. The man hasn't eaten since dinner time (18:00) and his caregiver advises he has recently been talking a great deal about his deceased wife and often wonders where she is.

INITIAL THOUGHTS You have some experience with this person because he is

listed in your wanderers program at the agency. You have a complete history and a list of emergency contacts. You also have access to all the reports generated in the past to see where he has been found before. You worry about the dementia/Alzheimer's part because that adds another dimension to an already complicated situation. It's no longer an issue of someone strutting his last vestiges of independence but someone who does not comprehend reality very well. He doesn't drive, which should limit your search area unless he called a taxi or a Good Samaritan drove him out of the area. The initial search is the same as for any missing person. If that fails you will have to get creative and be prepared for the long haul.

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PRE-RESPONSE

It's not unusual for someone suffering from dementia to suddenly leave and wander from home.

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POLICE SEPTEMBER 2015

Think It Through Questions • How many people are needed to secure the area? • Do you have any new places to search? • Is a K-9 bloodhound available? • Is the information in your database up to date? In cases like this, the initial set-up is the same. Secure the last known exit point for the bloodhound, get any updated information on the missing person, and start the search. Check the house and property first and then expand to a structured search pattern after. Make sure that the caregiver who is reporting the incident stays put and waits for the


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