Greater Peoria Metro Area, IL

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Safety and Driving Issues

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Submitted by Reflections Memory Center

Safety is an important issue in caring for a person with Alzheimer’s disease. Even with the best-laid plans, accidents can happen. Checking the safety of your home, keeping the person from wandering, and preventing them from driving are some ways you can minimize hazardous situations.

Changes in Home Management Skills
Over time, people with Alzheimer’s disease become less able to manage things around the house. For example, they may not remember:

  • If they turned off the oven or left the water running
  • How to use the phone in an emergency
  • To stay away from dangerous things around the house, such as certain medicines or household cleaners
  • Where things are in their own home

Use Home Safety Devices
As a caregiver, you can do many things to make a house safer for people with Alzheimer’s. Add the following to your home if you don’t already have them in place:

  • Smoke and carbon monoxide alarms in or near the kitchen and in all bedrooms
  • Emergency phone numbers (ambulance, poison control, doctors, hospital, etc.) and your home address near all telephones
  • Safety knobs on the stove and a shut-off switch
  • Childproof plugs for unused electrical outlets

Lock Up or Remove Some Items
Lock up or remove the following from your home:

  • All prescription and over-the-counter medicines
  • Alcohol
  • Cleaning products, dangerous chemicals such as paint thinner, matches, scissors, knives, etc.
  • Small throw rugs
  • Poisonous plants—call the U.S. National Poison Control Hotline at 1-800-222-1222 to find out which houseplants are poisonous
  • All guns and other weapons
  • Gasoline cans and other dangerous items in the garage

Limit Wandering
Many people with Alzheimer’s wander away from their home or caregiver. Knowing how to limit wandering can prevent a person from becoming lost or hurt:

  • Make sure the person carries some kind of identification or wears a medical bracelet. If they get lost and cannot communicate clearly, an ID will alert others to their identity and medical condition.
  • Consider enrolling the person in the Alzheimer’s Association’s Safe Return program. This program helps find people with Alzheimer’s disease who wander off or get lost. Call 1-888-572-8566 for more information.
  • Let neighbors know that the person with Alzheimer’s tends to wander.
  • Keep a recent photograph or video of the person to assist police if the person becomes lost.
  • Keep doors locked. Consider a keyed deadbolt, or add another lock placed up high or down low on the door. If the person can open a lock, you may need to get a new latch or lock.
  • Install an “announcing system” that chimes when the door opens.

When Driving Skills Decline
A person with mild memory loss may be able to drive safely sometimes. But, they may not be able to react quickly when faced with a surprise on the road. This can lead to dangerous results. If the person’s reaction time slows, then you need to stop the person from driving.

The person may be able to drive short distances on local streets during the day, but may not be able to drive safely at night or on a freeway. If this is the case, then limit the times and places that the person can drive.

One way to find out if a person is still competent to drive is through observation. The person observing should watch the older adult drive at different times of the day, in different types of traffic, and in different road conditions and weather. If riding with the driver is not possible, the observer may wish to follow the driver in another vehicle. Over time, a picture will emerge of things the driver can do well and things the driver may not do as well.

Signs That a Person Should Stop Driving
When the person with Alzheimer’s disease can’t think clearly or make good decisions, they should stop driving. One sign that someone should stop driving is new dents and scratches on the car. Another sign is taking a long time to do a simple errand and not being able to explain why, which may indicate that the person got lost.

Some people with memory problems decide on their own not to drive. Others don’t want to stop driving and may deny that they have a problem. As the caregiver, you need to explain why it’s important to stop driving. Do this in a caring way. Understand how unhappy the person may be to admit that they have reached this new stage.

One way to find out if a person is still competent to drive is through observation. The person observing should watch the older adult drive at different times of the day, in different types of traffic, and in different road conditions and weather. If riding with the driver is not possible, the observer may wish to follow the driver in another vehicle. Over time, a picture will emerge of things the driver can do well and things the driver may not do as well.

Tips to Stop Someone from Driving
Here are some ways to stop people with Alzheimer’s disease from driving:

  • Ask your doctor to tell the person to stop driving. The doctor can write “do not drive” on a prescription pad and you can show this to the person. Some states require doctors to tell them if a person with Alzheimer’s should no longer drive.
  • Contact your State Department of Motor Vehicles. Ask about a medical review for a person who may not be able to drive safely. This person may be asked to take a driving test. Their license could be taken away.
  • Ask family or friends to drive the person.
  • Take the person to get a driving test.
  • If the person won’t stop driving, hide the car keys, move the car, take out the distributor cap, or disconnect the battery.
  • Find other ways for the person to travel on their own. Transportation services include free or low-cost buses, taxi services, or carpools for older people. Some churches and community groups have volunteers who take seniors wherever they want to go. To find out about transportation services in your area, contact your local Area Agency on Aging or the National Transit Hotline at 1-800-527-8279.

Reflections is a new Alzheimer’s and Dementia Specialty Care facility located at 401 N. Park Ave. in Chatham. For more information about this unique memory care community, please contact Reflections’ Executive Director, Patrick Lam at 217-508-8527 any time.

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