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337. Dementia Wandering at Night — Why Locks Aren’t Solving What Happens When She Leaves the House

Episode 337 Published 4 weeks ago
Description

This discussion addresses a caregiving situation where a loved one repeatedly leaves the home, particularly during the night. When this occurs multiple times in the same setting, the issue is no longer a single incident. It indicates that the current caregiving environment may no longer be capable of reliably maintaining safety.

The focus is not on how to respond more quickly or more carefully in the moment. It is on recognizing that the underlying structure may no longer be holding. Repeated exit from the home, especially when the individual moves beyond visible or contained areas, reflects a change in condition that requires a corresponding change in the caregiving setup.

Efforts such as locking doors earlier, increasing monitoring, or adjusting routines may temporarily delay another incident. However, when the same pattern continues, these responses remain reactive. They do not resolve the core issue if the environment itself cannot prevent unsupervised exit.

The advisory question in this situation is direct: whether the current environment can continue to meet the basic safety requirement of preventing unsupervised wandering. When the caregiver becomes the primary or sole barrier between the individual and external risk, the situation has shifted beyond routine management and requires a decision regarding the care structure.

Key Advisory Points
  • Repeated wandering from the home indicates a change in condition that the current environment may not be able to contain
  • Managing each incident as it occurs does not resolve a recurring safety risk
  • When a loved one leaves the home and moves beyond controlled areas, the issue shifts from behavior management to environmental capacity
  • A caregiver cannot sustainably function as the sole overnight safety system
  • The presence of repeated exit behavior signals a decision point regarding whether the current setup can continue to be used safely
  • Delay in naming the decision allows the same risk pattern to continue without structural resolution
Timestamps

00:00 – When caregiving structures no longer match current needs
00:30 – A loved one leaving the home multiple times in one night
01:33 – Increasing monitoring and tightening routines
02:50 – Identifying when the environment is no longer containing the risk
03:44 – Defining the safety requirement: preventing unsupervised exit
04:02 – Recognizing the situation as a caregiving decision, not an isolated problem
04:27 – Evaluating whether the current environment can still function safely

If you are facing repeated wandering and the situation is no longer being contained within your current setup, this is a decision point.

A Caregiving Threshold Review provides:

  • 15 minutes
  • One defined problem
  • Clear advisory direction

This session is appropriate when:

  • A safety issue is repeating
  • The current environment may no longer be sufficient
  • A decision cannot be delayed without increasing risk

https://thinkdifferentdementia.thrivecart.com/dignicare-solutions-session/

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