Half of All Children With Autism Wander and Bolt from Safe Places

May 13th, 2012 by admin


About 1 in 88 children has been identified with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) according to estimates from CDC’s Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring (ADDM) Network.

The wandering and elopement survey found that approximately half of parents of children with autism report that their child elopes. Among these families, nearly 50% say that their child went missing long enough to cause significant concern about safety. The tendency of individuals with ASD to wander or “bolt” puts them at risk of trauma, injury or even death. More than one third of children who elope are never or rarely able to communicate their name, address, or phone number verbally or by writing/typing. Two in three parents report their missing children had a “close call” with a traffic injury. On average, medical expenditures for individuals with an ASD were 4.1–6.2 times greater than for those without an ASD.

Wandering was ranked among the most stressful ASD behaviors by 58% of parents of eloping autistics. A new technology from GTX Corp can help parents and caregivers track the whereabouts of their kids and ensure they are safe. This new technology is provided in partnership with the Talk About Curing Autism (TACA). The multi-patented GPS technology platform will also soon serve as the foundation for products designed to help the millions of families affected by autism, as a result of the new partnership between GTX Corp and Talk About Curing Autism (TACA).

Nearly half of children with ASD between the ages of 4 and 10 bolt, wander or elope.

May 8th, 2012 by admin


The autism community uses many terms to describe the fact that children and dependent adults with ASD depart safe spaces to put themselves in harm’s way.
A mother might say her son “is a runner” or that he “bolts” when they are in public places. A father might say his daughter “wanders” or “elopes.” It’s difficult to name the behavior because we know so little about it. Is it aimless, or are these individuals trying to reach a place or person? Is it motivated by fear, sensory-sensitivity, boredom, or curiosity? Is the person who wanders scared, joyful, or in a fog? How many individuals with ASD engage in this behavior, and to what lengths are families going to keep them safe? Until now, there were few evidence-based answers to such questions.

Of children with ASD who attempted to elope, nearly half actually succeeded and were missing long enough to cause parents significant concern about their safety. The situations were serious enough that 32% of parents in this situation called the police. Furthermore, two out of three reported their wandering child had a “close call” with traffic injury, and almost a third reported a “close call” with drowning.

Children with ASD have many behaviors that families find incredibly stressful, including self-injury, rigidity, aggression, and meltdowns. How did those whose children engaged in elopement behavior compare the stress involved to that caused by other challenging behaviors? More than half (57%) reported that elopement was the most, or among the most, stressful of ASD behaviors. Fear that a child would escape their home during the night disrupted sleep for more than 40% of these families. Likewise, fear of elopement kept 62% of such families from attending or enjoying activities outside the home, increasing social isolation.

GTX Corp (OTCBB: GTXO), the leader in customizable, 2-way GPS location based tracking solutions has been granted another utility patent, adding to the company’s growing IP portfolio that includes 11 issued patents, 5 patents pending and 34 U.S. and 28 foreign patents under its license. The multi-patented GPS technology platform will also soon serve as the foundation for products designed to help the millions of families affected by autism, as a result of a new partnership between GTX Corp and Talk About Curing Autism (TACA).

“With our award winning multi-patented GPS Smart Shoe and patent-pending Alertag we have been at the forefront of connected health for years, providing new levels of functional oversight, security and peace of mind to a variety of audiences and needs,” commented Patrick Bertagna, CEO of GTX Corp. “We look forward to developing and bringing to market new, innovative products that both satisfy the ever-increasing consumer demand for location based solutions and that will help support the families challenged with a special needs child.”

The life saver shoe; 2212 years in the making

May 2nd, 2012 by admin


The idea of a device that would give us geo-directional information dates back to 200BC. Although sailors and tradesmen used stones and magnetized needles to make their way, it took a few thousand years for our technology to advance to a point where the hand compass had been patented making a portable location device possible.

Two hundred years later, Dr. Ivan Getting, Professor Bradford Parkinson, and Roger L. Easton are attributed with the invention of GPS (Global Positioning System) — an advanced, multi-dimensional tracking system that sees everything, everywhere, all the time. By 1994 GPS was being used by the US military to detect sea, land, and air objects using bi-directional digital components to communicate with the satellites to ascribe time, speed, and location data to the request.

In less than a decade what was once the proprietary property of the Department of Defense became a hand held application that anyone could use to find people, anywhere, anytime in fewer than 70 heartbeats. Why heartbeats – because that is all that may separate finding a wandering Alzheimer’s victim from being victimized, injured or succumbing to the elements.

While there are nearly 6 million victims of the disease, there are double those numbers of caregivers who are pathologically stressed by the probability that 3 million or more of the afflicted will wander at any moment and need to found.

The innovation of the GPS (Navistar) shoe by GTX Corp and its manufacture by Aetrex Worldwide now provide a practical and affordable solution for the caregiver and the victim assuring them both peace of mind.  If one could place a price on peace of mind, then the $300 cost and monthly fee for the shoe would be a small price to pay. Given that the shoe’s location assurance comes with a great pair of walking shoes, it might even be seen as a bargain.

Hide and go seek is a life and death race for Alzheimer’s victims

April 1st, 2012 by admin


An estimated 4.5 to 5 million Americans have Alzheimer´s nearly 60% wander. That number is more than double what is was 1980. 1 in 10 Americans currently acknowledge they have a member of the family with Alzheimer´s and for every one afflicted, there are more than two people providing unpaid care 24 hours a day. This is just the beginning. As we live longer with an older population, more of us will be around with the disease creating problems for those who must care and protect us. Finding a wanderer quickly is a life and death race.

Alzheimer’s wandering tracking devices provide an essential service for both in-home and nursing home caregivers alike. The chances of finding a wanderer in a short period of time becomes very small without a real-time gps tracking device. And while there are numerous providers of wanderer tracking devices; Keruve, InTouch, Comfort Zone, UBI-5000E, EMSeeQ, S-911 Lola, eCare+Voice, WanderTrack, Silver Cloud, Lifetracker and projectlifesaver – one device  clearly stands out as the best and most practical.

The GPS Shoe developed by GTX Corp and manufactured by internationally respected Aetrex Worldwide has very distinct advantages. As a shoe it is worn by the patient and rarely if everremoved by them. It is a real-time 2-way solution that identifies location, bearing, speed and histories. The secure GUI portal interface is both simple and accurate to use. The shoe’s battery life can be adjusted depending on the individual and their history. It is discreet providing a level of privacy while affording constant location access.

The Aetrex Navistar GPS Footwear System offers care givers assurances unavailable with other solutions. Watch this CNET story on the first GPS enabled wandering tracking device in a shoe.

How can you find the demented when they don’t want to be found?

March 25th, 2012 by admin


Alzheimer’s wanderer’s go until they get stuck.
They will not leave many verifiable clues.
The afflicted have a previous history of wandering (72%)
They appear to lack ability to reverse direction.
The demented are oriented to the past, the degree of the disease sends them back in time
Coexisting medical problems that limit mobility are common.
The wanderer may attempt to travel to a former residence or favorite place.
Alzheimer’s may cross or depart from roads (67%) but are usually (89%) found
within one mile of home and half found within one-half miles.
Victims are typically found a short distance from road (50% within 33 yards)
They will not cry-out for help (1%) or respond to shouts (only 1% response rate).
Victims will succumb to the environment (hypothermia, drowning, and dehydration).

Given the behavioral profile of an Alzheimer’s victim that wanders, GPS tracking shoes provide the best solution for early notification of wandering, real time subject tracking, and ease of application use.

GTX Corp with its patented 2-way GPS technology and the Aetrex Navistar GPS Footwear System provide care givers peace of mind and an enhanced quality of life. Watch this: CNET

Millions of seniors with dementia will wander in search of their lost memories. While we can’t find those remembrances, we can find the lost victims themselves.

March 18th, 2012 by admin


The Mayo Clinic describes Alzheimer’s and the problem of Wandering: The disease can erase a person’s memory of once-familiar surroundings, as well as make it extremely difficult to adapt to new surroundings. As a result, people who have Alzheimer’s may wander away from their homes or care centers and turn up lost, frightened and disoriented — sometimes far from where they started.

“Wandering is a behavior that happens mainly as a result of declining cognitive skills,” says Beth Kallmyer, director of family and information services at the Alzheimer’s Association in Chicago. “The loss of memory impacts their ability to discern where they are.”

Today, more than 5 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer’s disease. That number is expected to grow to 20 million in the coming years, according to Andrew Carle at George Mason University.

More than 60 percent of people who have Alzheimer’s wander at some point, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. Often, someone who’s wandering is: searching for something, escaping from something or reliving a past event. This can and does happen often. And it stresses the care giver as much if not more than the afflicted.

While there is no solution to Alzheimer’s or wandering, there is a GPS Tracking device embedded discretely in a walking shoe that will enable care givers to locate a wanderer within a minute, know the direction they are moving  and at what speed – walking or in a vehicle.

The GPS Shoe was developed by GTX Corp and is available in the Aetrex Navistar GPS Footwear System.   Watch this video from CNET and regain your peace of mind.

Bigger than a Groupon, more rewarding than a FourSquare and so much easier than a buyer’s rebate

March 8th, 2012 by admin


This is where the “do it” meets the ”dollars” …http://www.gtxcorp.com/ and its million subscriber http://www.locimobile.com/ subsidiary have inked a deal with http://allstardeals.com/1fyrj to give every local guy the opportunity to solicit and syndicate coupon offers…we think that getting paid for offering discounts is a very nice gig. To see just how it works check out: http://www.allstardeals.com/deals/National/2-Movie-Tickets.  All at once knowing who isn’t as good as knowing where and how much.

For those afflicted with Alzheimer’s, a walk may bring them one step closer to death.

March 4th, 2012 by admin


Alzheimer’s disease causes its victims to wander off. Getting lost places them at great risk. They can die – of those lost more than 72 hours, only a few will survive.

More than 300 Alzheimer’s sufferers wander and/or get lost each day. Each year there are as many as 125,000 reports of victims of Alzheimer’s disease wandering away …many more go unreported. Experts estimate that 60 percent of persons suffering from Alzheimer’s will wander. This puts the potential pool of wanderers at an epidemic 3,000,000 individuals

Most of those who wander don’t get very far. As a result, they are found quickly and only local residents get involved in their search. Of those found within 12 hours, most percent survive –however, one in 14 doesn’t make it home. Of those lost more than 24 hours – 67 of 100 die. Of those lost more than 72 hours, 80 percent never make it home.

When it happens, caretakers find themselves in a total state of confusion — feeling helpless. Although most Alzheimer’s sufferers that wander are found within a mile and a half of their home. These wanderers are often on foot. Nevertheless, finding them is like looking for a needle in a haystack and very costly to the community. Their search endangers others in the community that might need the assistance of those resources.

When the victims wander they rarely ask for help. They don’t tell anyone they are lost. And in most cases, they don’t leave any physical clues that will help you find them unless they are wearing GPS enabled tracking shoes developed by GTX Corp and marketed by Aetrex Worlwide. Wearing these discreet 2-way devices their every footstep can be tracked and mapped in real-time on a web enabled mobile phone, notebook or computer.

For some GPS is about global positioning satellites. For the 12 million Alzheimer’s caregivers it is a Great People Saver.

Getting lost is the least of the problem.

February 27th, 2012 by admin


Nearly 12 million of us take care of the 5.6 million Americans with the Alzheimer’s disease, a number that’s expected to increase to 16 million by 2050, according to the Alzheimer’s Assn.

The burden of care-taking places tremendous pressure on one’s time and resources. A 2009 AARP and National Alliance for Caregiving survey learned that caregivers — most typically middle-aged women providing care for a parent — give more than 20 hours of their time each week. Most say it interferes with work, and the longer someone is a caregiver, the more likely her own physical and mental health is to suffer.

One of the most troublesome circumstances with the disease is wandering or sun-downing where the afflicted will head out of where they are supposed to be and become disoriented. That happens to about 60% of the millions of the disease’s victims and only half will be found before they succumb to accidents, weather or exposure.

To provide a personal and discreet solution GTX Corp and Aetrex Worlwide have partnered to provide a walking shoe with a 2-way GPS tracking device that will alert,
locate and track with a click to web enabled  phone, pad or computer. AARP though it a viable solution.

It is common for a person with dementia to wander and become lost; many do repeatedly. In fact, over 60 percent of those with dementia will wander.

February 4th, 2012 by admin


Using “common” and “60%” really does not address the true impact or understanding of wandering.

There are millions afflicted with dementia in the US. If 60% of just 1 million of them were currently wandering then law enforcement, emergency services, family, friends, volunteers and the news would be searching for 600,000 senior adults across the country. But there isn’t just 1 million mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, uncles, aunts, cousins, friends, brothers and sisters lost, because 5.4 million are currently afflicted with Alzheimer’s and there are thousands more with other cognitive disorders.

It is probable that the numbers of those lost will reach 3.320,000 (60% of 5.4 million) and that number grows every day. We have to face the reality that we have and will continue for decades to have a problem efficiently locating those that wander.

If not located quickly many will succumb to the elements, others will contract serious health conditions and still others will fall victim to crimes. While the average search will cost $36,000 – the ramifications of each event will reach staggering proportions when all related costs are compiled.

The prospect of a nation aging at an ever accelerated pace without the preparedness to meet the circumstances that it will face until an effective treatment, cure, or prevention is found…may very well over tax our economy and government.

There are options until we become better informed about the why’s and where for of dimentia. We have an affordable, practicable means and method to afford those that suffer from dementia and their caregivers peace of mind. Should the afflicted wander off and become lost, they can be located with a unique, 2-way embedded GPS technology placed within a comfortable walking shoe and trackable through a smart phone or computer. To take advantage of this innovative patented GPS Shoe technology, visit the web site of Aetrex Worldwide and lace up an effective solution to “sundowing” developed by the company that keeps people connected; GTX Corp.

Word of the device is getting out: http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/goodlife/138394604.html.