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A few small companies attempted similar Alzheimer's tracking a few years ago before the technology could keep pace, says University of Rochester assisted-cognition specialist Henry Kautz, who isn't involved with the Alzheimer's Association.
The accuracy of GPS, for instance, depends on clear access to satellites powering the navigation tool, meaning a tunnel or tall buildings can block signals. Today's "network-assisted GPS" can pair GPS with nearby cell phone towers to improve reliability, Kautz said.
"This is going to be a big hit," Kautz said of Comfort Zone, largely because "a trusted nonprofit" will be an umbrella for multiple choices.
The technology is not a replacement for in-person supervision, cautioned Nina Silverstein, a gerontology professor at the University of Massachusetts, Boston.
But pilot-testing Comfort Zone gave Karen Zimmerman's husband peace of mind. The Alexandria, Va., woman was diagnosed with Alzheimer's at the unusually young age of 51, and nearly two years later still drives on her own every day for volunteer work and to shop.
Independence is "the most important thing to me right now, it really is. If I had to sit here at the house all day, I don't know what I would do," says Zimmerman.
She does get "very flustered" on the few occasions she's gotten turned around, says husband Keith Holdsworth, who wants a new Comfort Zone transmitter on her car before the couple's next trip to the out-of-state retirement home they're building, where even he finds the unfamiliar roads confusing.
"It'll get to the point where I'll need to rein her in," Holdsworth says. But the service "will afford her that independence for a longer period of time."
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On the Net:
Alzheimer's Association:
http://www.alz.org/comfortzone/
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