Sundown Syndrome and How It Affects Senior Care
Sundown syndrome, a condition affecting many seniors with dementia characterized by increased confusion, agitation, and aggression at sunset, poses significant challenges for assisted living facilities, particularly due to the heightened risk of wandering, and while its exact cause remains unclear—ranging from sensory overload to hormonal changes—caregivers must implement vigilant monitoring and tailored strategies to manage these symptoms and ensure resident safety.
For caregivers dealing with residents who have sundowners syndrome, the end of the day can be a difficult and trying time. This common disorder has been a subject of increasing research, with doctors hoping to figure out the exact cause of sundowners syndrome and why it does not impact all assisted living residents with dementia.
What’s especially worrying about sundowners syndrome is it can lead residents to wander, sparking added concern for senior facilities. How can assisted living communities address the problems caused by this phenomenon?
What Is Sundowners Syndrome?
It’s a condition often affecting those with Alzheimer’s disease and other types of dementia. The name describes the approximate time when symptoms begin appearing — when the sun goes down.
Sundowning Symptoms:
- Distress and confusion
- Aggressive behavior
- Restlessness
At this time of day, affected people experience increased agitation and memory loss. They may become angry or confused along with exhibiting signs of distress or aggression.
Researchers remain divided on the exact reason behind sundowners syndrome. Some say it’s caused by the buildup of sensory stimulation dementia residents experience, which threatens to overwhelm them by day’s end. Others believe hormonal imbalances or fatigue is the culprit. A few studies have suggested there is an actual tie between the onset of darkness and sundowners syndrome, with some nursing facilities reporting increased symptoms from the disorder in the winter.
Sundowners Syndrome and Wandering Seniors
Wandering is arguably the most serious concern for those suffering from sundowners syndrome. When a senior with dementia wanders from their room, they may not be able to find their way back, especially when they are experiencing several other symptoms that may be frustrating or confusing.
Senior care facilities know this can be a danger for their residents. They try to keep residents with dementia in closely monitored areas. But they don’t want these residents to feel as though they’re on lockdown or alarm their families. How can you manage this tendency to wander while giving residents their freedom? One way to do it is to deploy a real-time resident location system which gives caregivers a way to unobtrusively keep track of their residents.
Resident security platforms help assisted living communities empower residents with a feeling of control and freedom while ensuring their safety and security. Each resident is located with a small, comfortable tag that enables them with the freedom to move around the community and interact with other residents. The system is programmable to allow certain residents to pass through designated access points (for example: a common area) while others remain secured and protected. With the ability to customize a resident's access level by high-risk vs. low-risk, residents are provided with the appropriate level of protection from wandering into dangerous areas.
Resident Safety in a Senior Care Environment
Allowing residents with dementia to maintain their dignity and some self-sufficiency is important to many facilities. Contact CenTrak today to request a demo of the CenTrak Wander Management solution.
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