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الاثنين، 3 أكتوبر 2011

Rise in autism, Alzheimer's ups the need for tracking devices








Jack­son Kastner was known around Monroe as his mama's lit­tle duckling. The autis­tic 4-year-old fol­lowed Melissa Kastner ev­erywhere she went.
But on March 27, af­ter unloading groceries, Kastner turned and saw that Jack­son was gone. Less than three hours lat­er, au­thor­ities recovered his body from the Raisin Riv­er. Like oth­ers with autism, he had wandered away.
The prob­lem of wandering is getting more at­tention as autism diagnoses increase and the number of people living with Alzheimer's disease and de­mentia con­tinues to grow, said experts. Be­tween 2000 and 2025, the greater Michigan chap­ter of the Alzheimer's                             
As­sociation says, the number of people in the state age 65 and old­er with Alzheimer's disease will jump 12%, from 170,000 to                 
190,000.
Sev­eral tracking devices, such as ra­dio wristbands, have cropped up in re­cent years,         
touted as offering peace of mind for par­ents like Kastner and people like Doris Gunter who care for some­one with Alzheimer's disease or de­mentia. The Detroi­ter's 71-year-old fa­ther, L.J. Blevins, left their backyard in July and is still mis­s­ing.
The devices promise a quick and safe return of a loved one who has wandered away.
Kastner said a tracking device could have saved Jack­son's life.
"If I would have known about some device that would have tracked him, I would have used it," she said. "I would take out a loan to do it."
GPS, ra­dio add tracking tech to find wanderers
Af­ter mul­ti­ple searches for autis­tic chil­dren and se­nior cit­i­zens who had wandered away

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