Hamilton Journal News

First responders to receive training in handling people with dementia

Troy fire department, others seek out help from the experts.

- By Edwina Blackwell Clark Edwina Blackwell Clark is director of communicat­ions of the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, Miami Valley Chapter. She can be emailed at edblackwel­lclark@alz.org. HEALTH

This year, Troy Fire Chief Matthew Simmons said his department has experience­d an increased number of emergency medical service calls involving older adults with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.

“During the year of COVID, we have had more interactio­ns with the elderly — depressed on the low end or stressed on the high end,” Chief Simmons said. He added that 80-85 percent of the department’s calls involve people 70 years old and older. Now he is seeing more adults with dementia who are agitated.

In two recent calls, patients with dementia were combative, agitated and swung at the EMS/ paramedic, Simmons said. “When we are dealing with patients with Alzheimer’s or dementia, it does elevate the nature of the call,” Simmons said. “You’re called to something. Is there a method or procedure you can do ... For the elderly they don’t know what they are doing,” Simmons said.

He recognized that his staff needed more training on how to communicat­e and de-escalate situations. So, he took the advice of a family member of one of those patients and called the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n Miami Valley Chapter.

On April 13, 14, and 15, his staff will be trained by Alzheimer’s Associatio­n staff on effective communicat­ion strategies. “It couldn’t come at a better time, in my opinion,” Simmons said.

In Ohio, 220,000 individual­s 65 years old and older live with Alzheimer’s disease, which is a form of dementia. According to the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, national statistics show that six in 10 individual­s with dementia will wander. That fact alone is a potential for 132,000 interactio­ns between someone living with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease and an Ohio first responder.

Wandering is just one symptom of Alzheimer’s. When coupled with agitation and other behavioral symptoms, it only increases the chances of an unintended and potentiall­y dangerous interactio­n between Ohio’s most vulnerable and a first responder.

Simmons said the Troy Fire Department has chemical and physical restraints to use in situations like that but “it doesn’t mean we have to use them.”

“We are not the experts at everything. When we have the opportunit­y to partner with people who are the experts we’re are going to do that ... we need some help.”

The Alzheimer’s Associatio­n in Ohio has worked with former Montgomery County Sheriff and State Rep. Phil Plummer, R-Dayton, and Rep. Thomas West, D-Canton, who introduced legislatio­n that requires enhanced dementia training for first responders. House Bill 23 is awaiting a vote in the full Ohio House of Representa­tives.

While the legislatio­n is pending, the Associatio­n continues to work with police and fire department­s around the state to provide education.

In Cincinnati, the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n is one of several community partners brought together as part of a threeyear $150,000 grant benefittin­g the Cincinnati Police Department to develop additional training and to use technology to better serve individual­s with Alzheimer’s, dementia, autism and developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

The police department will create a two-day training curriculum that will educate personnel to indicators, response options, behavioral tendencies and interperso­nal skills related to persons experienci­ng dementia or developmen­tal disabiliti­es. The department plans to identify 25 officers to receive the training and then they will be designated as primary responders to those type of calls. Another goal is to develop a policy and procedure that addresses police response and investigat­ion of missing individual­s with dementia and developmen­tal disabiliti­es. Lt. Adam Hennie, Cincinnati Police Academy Commander, said the goal is to reduce the number of injuries and death in individual­s with dementia and developmen­tal disabiliti­es in the Greater Cincinnati area. While he said he was not aware of an increase in cases, “you always want to be proactive and don’t want to be reactive. I know the command staff always embraces innovative training such as this.”

Trey Addison, director of State Public Policy for the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n in Ohio, said, “Dementia training for Ohio’s first responders is essential to developing a dementia friendly workforce. Ohio is becoming a leader on Alzheimer’s and dementia.

The Alzheimer’s Associatio­n’s support of HB 23 comes from our experience in serving Ohioans living with dementia and the concerns that their caregivers have if their loved one wanders and has an encounter with a first responder. HB 23 is proactive legislatio­n, that will equip Ohio’s new generation of first responders with the tools they need to help individual­s living with dementia and put dementia caregivers at ease.”

Chief Simmons said the local training provided by the Associatio­n will be great because they have a lot of newer and younger personnel. Ultimately, “you want to treat everyone like they are your loved one,” Simmons said.

 ?? FILE ?? Troy Fire Chief Matthew Simmons (right rear), looks over equipment at the Troy
Fire Department. This week, Simmons and his staff will be trained by Alzheimer’s Associatio­n staff members on effective communicat­ion strategies to use with people who have dementia.
FILE Troy Fire Chief Matthew Simmons (right rear), looks over equipment at the Troy Fire Department. This week, Simmons and his staff will be trained by Alzheimer’s Associatio­n staff members on effective communicat­ion strategies to use with people who have dementia.

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