Wander Management & Prevention in Assisted Living Facilities
The article discusses the risks and prevalence of unsupervised wandering among cognitively impaired residents in assisted living facilities, highlighting tragic cases of hypothermia-related deaths, and emphasizes the importance of wander management systems that include exit protection and tamper detection to ensure resident safety while maintaining their independence.
A few years ago, an elderly woman died after wandering from a Minnesota assisted living facility barefoot in the middle of the night. When a facility caretaker noticed the woman was missing from her apartment, she immediately began searching for the missing resident. She ultimately found her in the parking lot, but the amount of time that the woman had been out in the cold alone was unknown.
This long-term care facility prides itself on providing assisted but independent living. While they have safeguards to keep out strangers, there isn't a defense in place to ensure that residents remain safe inside as they are free to move around the facility as they please.
Unfortunately, unsupervised resident wandering is more common than we would hope, especially if they feel disoriented or lost. When it happens during winter or adverse weather conditions, the chance of an unfavorable outcome is high. Only a day after Minnesota's event, a London woman with dementia wandered from her assisted living community and died of hypothermia. Again, the amount of time this woman was exposed to the elements outside is unknown.
From exit protection to tamper detection, wander management systems for healthcare maintain simplicity across the entire healthcare enterprise.
Why Residents Wander
Wandering is highly prevalent in residents suffering from some degree of cognitive impairment, such as dementia or Alzheimer's. It's estimated that 60% of people with dementia will wander. Patients can wander for various reasons, from agitation to feeling the need to go home.
Different Types of Wandering
Residents may present different types of wandering depending on their motivations:
- Aimless wandering: This type of wandering occurs when a resident feels bored, uncomfortable, stressed or confused. They will wander without any purpose or destination in mind.
- Purposeful wandering: When a resident's wandering is motivated by an intent or an action they want to accomplish, it is called purposeful wandering. The resident might be looking for a person or an object. They could also be attempting to go home or to work.
- Environmentally cued wandering: Wandering can occur when a resident responds to environmental stimuli, such as seeing a door or a coat.
- Reminiscent wandering: This type of wandering can happen when a resident is unaware of their surroundings and responds to an imagined, often past, environment.
Why Is Wandering a Problem in an Aged Care Facility?
Residents eloping from a care facility poses a serious concern for their safety. Wandering has resulted in residents sustaining severe injuries or suffering malnutrition, dehydration and death. The risks are increased when the resident is not found within 24 hours, with about half of the elopements leading to injury and death due to an accident, crime or natural causes.
A wandering patient can also be a danger to staff and visitors. Additionally, the incident may disrupt facility operations and interrupt patient independence and privacy. The significant risks and frequency of elopement facilitate the need for practical solutions to address the issue.
To help prevent patient wandering, facilities can deploy wander management systems such as a real-time location system, alarm systems, staff strategies and more.
What Can Help Prevent Resident Wandering
The easiest way to help empower residents with a feeling of control and freedom while still ensuring their safety and security throughout the assisted living facility is with an automated wander management system. This solution is programmable and allows certain residents to pass through designated common areas, such as recreation rooms, while others remain secured and protected within different areas via automated locking of doors and disabling of elevators.
Residents can enjoy the ability to use the facility's amenities and resources without having a sense of being on “lockdown.” It also offers the security of not allowing residents to wander into dangerous areas.
If a resident begins to wander out of bounds, staff members are immediately notified and can respectfully redirect them before they travel too far. This avoids awkward encounters and dangerous situations and significantly reduces the time caregivers spend searching for missing residents.
How Does the Patient Wandering System Work?
Wander management systems provide real-time locating capabilities of all residents from a single RTLS infrastructure. When a resident attempts to leave the facility, enter an unauthorized area or tamper with the band, a wander alert system will sound and notify the staff through the RTLS software. With real-time location updates, instant notifications and automated lockdown procedures, you can provide ultimate security and safety to residents in your facility.
Learn More
To learn more about automated resident wandering solutions and how they can become an assisted living community's first line of defense against wandering, download CenTrak's Long-Term Care Resident Security Overview and request a demo today.
Related
Manage Patient Elopement with a Real-Time Visibility Platform
The article discusses the critical issue of patient elopement in healthcare facilities, highlighting severe incidents and legal consequences, and advocates for the use of advanced real-time location systems (RTLS) with patient tags to enhance safety by providing flexible, intelligent, and simple monitoring solutions to prevent wandering and elopement of cognitively impaired patients.
CenTrak Launches TruView™ for Senior Living Communities
CenTrak launched TruView™, a cost-effective, multi-technology real-time locating and emergency alert system specifically designed for senior living communities, featuring ergonomic pendants, haptic feedback, advanced wander management, and detailed analytics to enhance resident safety, reduce emergency response times, improve care workflows, and provide precise indoor and outdoor location tracking across various care settings.
Wander Management at Samaritan Village Senior Living
Samaritan Village senior living community implemented CenTrak’s real-time location system with wearable badges to enhance resident security by allowing flexible area access, real-time location tracking, and immediate caregiver alerts, thereby preserving residents' independence while ensuring quick responses to emergencies and providing peace of mind to residents and their families.
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.
Wander Management
Wander management systems use wearable technology and real-time location monitoring to track at-risk individuals within healthcare facilities, sending automated alerts and integrating with security measures to prevent unsafe wandering, thereby enhancing safety for patients with cognitive impairments and providing peace of mind to caregivers.
Five Expectations for your Senior Community’s E-Call System
The article outlines five essential features senior living communities should require from their emergency call (E-call) systems, emphasizing advanced real-time location tracking technology like TruLocation™ for immediate and precise resident and staff positioning, which enhances safety, caregiver efficiency, and overall quality of care.