You can’t always control the wind, but you can control your sail
Posted August 29th, 2007 by Lori Aulenbach under the category of General+ Increase Font Size | - Decrease Font Size
I saw a segment on Good Morning America this morning about a new micro chip a company called VeriChip Corporation has manufactured. When implanted in the arm of an older adult, the VeriMed RFID links them to a database which provides basic information to someone should the carrier become disoriented, lost or too ill to tell them who they are or where they live. Facilities are using this initially for Alzheimer’s patients who have a tendency to stray as part of their infirmity and may wind up in private neighborhoods or hospital emergency rooms unknowingly.
“We have always believed that the Alzheimer’s patient population is an important, at-risk group who could benefit from the VeriMed Patient Identification System,” said Scott R. Silverman, Chairman and CEO of VeriChip Corporation. “Until recently, however, we did not fully understand the value of the VeriMed system for the caregivers of Alzheimer’s patients. By providing medical personnel quick access to identification and medical records information in an emergency situation, that caregiver is simultaneously informing medical personnel that he or she is responsible for someone unable to care for themselves.”
Although utilizing the microchip’s innate GPS tracking capabilities is not currently identified as a use for the implant, health industry leaders believe this will be an important component in the very near future, used to locate wandering Alzheimer’s and other dementia patients.
The use of this product, although completely voluntary, has created a concern in the minds of many human rights activists. Civil libertarians are worried that this technology may be misused and people’s privacy violated.
This matter of control—older adults being questioned about their decision making capabilities and maybe at some point proven not to be able to make some or all life decisions presents difficult and sometimes painful choices family members have to make.
Is it better to allow civil liberty to take precedence over physical or mental infirmity even if it allows vulnerability and perhaps endangers the lives of older adults? And what if there is no family member to contribute to these dilemmas that face aging adults?
Denise Hoak, Director of Assisted Living at Garden Spot Village states, “I don’t think families are as large as they once were. So a lot of our seniors don’t have any family. I see residents that are aging trying to do it alone. There are issues like finances, which pose real problems. It’s a great concern to them as well as to us [healthcare providers] because we are not allowed to intervene or be power of attorneys to residents. We have been able to maintain, but I see more and more residents without families not being able to make their own decisions. Social services provide support in a place like this, a retirement community; also the Area on Aging can be pulled in. But more and more seniors are out living their children.”
Attitude can affect good health and longevity almost as much as any other factor in a person’s life. Additionally, caregivers should try to help older adults maintain that control by allowing them as much independence as possible. Health professionals should recognize that each person is unique in what they value in life, and how much control they feel they have. They also need to realize that an older adult who adopts any sort of destructive behavior may have suffered a loss that has affected their feelings of control.