@GozzaCraft I think you'd be really surprised, most wouldn't. At least not go that far, most may order the taxi for her but beyond that was going above so fair play to the girl.
@JustGarryGamesYou’d think but no. I went to a very similar job where a member of the public waited for us and stopped the man from running away. At least 50 to 100 cars drove by and paid no notice. Very few people actually watch out for elderly or disabled people in this country.
My friend works with elderly people and she says it's far kinder to just distract them rather than tell them the bald truth. For example, she had one patient who kept getting out of bed and trying to get dressed in the middle of the night and saying she had to get her children from school. Other nurses would say "Your kids aren't in school anymore...they're grown up" and it would distress her, My friend used to say 'Oh it's too early still Mavis...you've got hours yet. Pop your pyjamas back on and we'll go together later when it's time" and Mavis would be happy with that and get back in bed. She'd get so distressed when the others told her they'd all grown up!
thats true - my godfather has dementia and something his carers have told us (my family and myself) is that you should always keep in mind their emotions. for example, if he asks about a family member who has passed, dont tell him that theyre deceased, because for them its like hearing that news for the first time all over again and re-processing it emotionally. if he asks about them or for them just pretend as though theyre busy, or else youre constantly subjecting them to this terrible news over and over for what feels like the first time each time to them. its so disheartening to hear about
My Gran had this and each time I visited her at the care home, she would ask "How's Granddad?" and "When is he coming to visit?". It was very upsetting for her and myself when I explained he was no longer with us. After the third time I decided to tell her Granddad is fine and he's busy in the shed, she would smile and say "he's never out of that bloody shed". This was the only time I've lied to her but I can live with that.
I sincerely refuse calling that a lie. A lie to me implies 1. me having an advantage bevor the one that gets lied to, 2. the one getting lied to has a disadvantage from this. So not just an advantage but a disadvantage has to be involved and thirdly the lie must come from a bad „will“. You don’t want anything bad for her. Quite the opposite. Therefore you did everything right. Besides that, what else is there to do that would result in something productive. It’s „unproductive“ to me to break people on daily basis.
I cared for a gentleman with dementia. His daughter and wife had passed but we never told him otherwise. His remaining families decided not to tell him about their funerals as he wouldn't have understood. He died about a year ago non the wiser and it was wonderful to think that in his world, everyone he loved dearly was still living.
I used to lie to my grandma too. She kept asking where my granddad was and we just told her that he was on the loo, out shopping or working in the garden. She usually asked once every 2 to 5 minutes. It's not nice to lie of course, but the truth would hurt even more.
ha ha ha .. typical grandmother response "He's never out of that bloody shed" ha ha ha .. I can almost hear her tone cause that is EXACTLY what my grandma would've replied. LOL
Brian served in the Life Guards and was a police Inspector. Norma was a nurse. Two wonderful, upstanding, respectable people who faithfully served the public and this is what it comes down to. Norma deserves to be cared for the way she cared for others - with kindness, compassion and love.
Sadly the elderly are treated quite poorly here in England, a lot of the time it falls on their younger family members to provide care, not the NHS as it can become quite costly to have care two times a day for them (NHS is in bad shape if you hadn't heard), and if the elderly don't have a supportive family, well, stuff like this can happen. I do give credit for our Police for trying to provide care though when they can.
@@digitallifeline162 Not just that, eventually she’ll forget everything. You forget how to walk, how to eat, how to dress and eventually, how to breathe.
My Grandmother has had Alzheimer’s for 10 years and lives in an aged care facility here in Australia. I can say that allowing your Grandmother to live in your home is the best decision you will ever make. Nothing compares to living with family who don’t need to be paid to love and care for you - best of luck on your journey
As someone who works with Dementia the first sign you know someone has it is they start asking for their parents. It's far kinder to play along with them than tell them the truth. They live in a time that no longer exists and nothing can convince them otherwise, which is heartbreaking for their families.
My great aunt is 80 and has Dementia and kept talking about being with her mother. The aid workers thought she was crazy again but my great grandmother is actually 103 and still alive.
ha ha ha .. oh that is a hilarious and heartwarming story .... :) as the nurses roll their eyes and say "oh poor lady" it would've been AWESOME if her mother did walk in LOL
We tend to think of our parents or grandparents when we see videos like this, but what broke my heart this time was the thought of this being my daughter in the future, trying to get home to us after we're long gone. So, so sad.
The member of the public who must of paid for and got in that cab with Norma to make sure she got home ok is a true and beautiful human and deserves so much credit for the way this situation ended. The police were amazing but so was that female that called it in.
The woman who stayed with her and called is amazing. Very grateful for her. My grandpa died of dementia, at the end he couldn’t even sit up or speak. Just laid there and babbled at the ceiling. Heart shattering doesn’t begin to describe it. God I really hope she’s got regular carers though.
My best friend’s granny passed from dementia last October. The last lucid moment she had, i walkedby her room, and she asked what i was up to. I told her honestly, “we’re gonna go watch movies in the other room, we’ll keep it down” and she told me “watch good ones, I’ll be watching my tv” And the following weekend she passed in her sleep. I don’t know why I was the one to witness her last moment, but she’d known me since i was in high school and called me her other grandkid and we’d tell family stories back and forth when she first started forgetting things. Later on she thought I was either her family member or her friend. I miss Granny terribly. I’m glad she was sleeping when she passed though, it seems much more peaceful.
Such a lovely lady. Such a shame she has to have a disease such as this. The fear and confusion she must’ve been feeling and she’s still sweet and kind.
I hope Donna receives the appropriate training. It was painful to watch her lack of awareness at times. 'It doesn't fall to anyone really' - says it all. Could have said, 'we all have a responsibility and a part to play'.
Yeah, the bag grabbing, the math about her mum and herself - I cringed several times. Her heart’s absolutely in the right place, it’s a hard thing to manage, I’d love for them to just get some additional training.
@@grayskindablue The prettiest Emergency Responders are very often self centred which makes them a bit narcissistic . For every unpleasant member of the Forces there are hundreds of amazingly kind ones who are beautiful inside and out .I think everyone is externally beautiful and that beauty shines through .
Yeah, it's clear she is trained to deal with drunks, roughens, etc... but not vulnerable elderly people. I think she realised after a while, as didn't correct her about her husband.
When we moved into our new home. There was a lady that came up on her porch and walked right in our house and elderly lady I offered her a cup of coffee she thought it was one of her family members. And we had to call the police and they took her back that the facility where she was living. It breaks my heart to see them like that. She didn't know that we were not her family
Dementia is the biggest concern I have for my family, especially those who don't have a partner. I wish with every fibre of my being that a cure can be found.
As soon as she talked about Brian visiting his parents I just couldn’t take it anymore.. this is probably the first thing I’ve seen on TH-cam that’s made my ducts weep..
I had a situation like this in my local shopping area. Elderly gentleman, nice as they come asking where a certain shop was. I said that I would show him, he asked about another shop he had to go to that had been closed for over ten years. When I told him, he became very confused and said he could not remember how he got from his house. After a few more questions, it was clear he was lost, he could not remember his name, age or where he lived. He got a bit upset as he was worried he would get in trouble bless him. I hold him that it was no worry and just wanted to make sure he was safe. Took him to a local cafe and called the police who came and took him home. As it turned out, he had been reported missing earlier that day by his family who were all looking for him. He was very thankful to me and my mum for helping him and we were just glad he was able to get home to his family safe. Please, I really encourage that if you ever find someone in this situation, please do what you can to help them as sadly we all know the horrible people who would take advantage,
There is insufficient background to know the circumstances of Norma's situation, but clearly her needs now have to be attended to by social services (though please not think they are staffed enough to deal with every case). My mother, in the early stages of dementia, wished to be independent, and would walk into our local town, shop, then find she couldn't remember how to get back home. Twice she was brought back home by police (I made sure her address was in her purse) and once I was called by Tesco Metro just up the road, and once by a caring woman who trailed her back home. It really does break my heart to think this, as the policeman says, is a daily occurrence.
That member of the public was an angel! She was also better at dealing with this poor soul than the police were. My Grandmother had dementia, and i thank my life she never got this far. Its an awful illness
Outside a shop in Windsor Ontario two months ago, there was an older lady struggling to use her smart phone to call a taxi. I told her that smart phones can be complicated for people of any age and we had a laugh. I phoned a taxi for her and she was grateful. However, after I packed my trunk and drove on to another store, I felt really BAD that I just didn't ask her where she lived and driven her home myself. I went back to the location and she was gone so the Taxi did come and collect her. In life, we should all do whatever is necessary to help the elderly, god willing we will be there one day too and will hope the younger generations help us.
Never try to argue with someone who seems confused - just makes it worse. Try to distract them and take it from there - just as these cops did! Norma really shouldn’t live on her own
God that's heavy. That poor 83 year old woman claiming her 80-something year old mum lives in that house even though the mum has probably been dead 25+ years.
What the policeman says at 5:50 is so relatable, My grandmother was cursed with dementia, and it's crazy how quickly it escalates, in a matter of 2-3 years she went from being a obstinate person to a shell of her former self, left in a state of confusion who didnt even know who we were, my father included (her own (only) son). It is heartbreaking, when she's not the person I remembered growing up as a kid and transitioning into my adult years.
I experienced this first hand, though not dementia. My mum was dying of stomach cancer. Near the end she was on a bunch of medications that left her drifting through a bunch of old memories mashed up together. She'd know where she was one minute, and then another asked me how the trip to the city center was.
I work as a Healthcare assistant. And work with elderly people with Alzheimer's and dementia. And that lady did the right thing trying to help this old lady
I was told that it's always kinder to enter their world. People with Dementia must have routine and need to feel safe. My mum used to ask me where her daddy was, and once called me "mummy" If you argue or correct them they get stressed and upset, they don't understand so please don't do it. I actually enjoyed entering my mother's world. You're not lying, because they believe whatever they're saying at the time. We had wonderful slightly obscure conversations that brought me so much closer to her. She made me laugh too. My favourite memory is of her sleeping, snuggled up in my arms squashed up together on her single bed as I comforted her after she'd become distressed in the night again. She had become my child. She's been gone 3yrs now, but lovely memories.
To be honest most police officers are decent people , they get a bad wrap a lot but often by people who are in the wrong , considering they are doing a job for our safety and are there 24/7 at the end of a phone we should respect them more really , when the shit hits the fan they are the ones most would call
I work with dementia patients have done for 21 years. The best way to go is to agree with them and distract them. Kindnesses..patience and compassion towards them all the way ❤
Thank Goodness that woman helped her and stayed with her untill the police came,anything could of happened to the poor lady.I hope she can get someone to look after her.This breaks my heart my father had dementia and it is a sad thing.
i was almost bike jacked the other week by motorbike thieves and when the police came out that graham mcshane was one of the coppers that came out, nice decent guy he was
My mother has dementia. I hope most people would behave like the lovely woman who found her. The police officers could do with training but they tried their best and are fairly compassionate here.
Even in a lost mind where one cannot know themselves, they always want to find their way home to their mother, but alas, her mother was no longer there.
Im crying like a kid, for me is very sad everytime I hear about dementia my grandpa got it and it is heart breaking when you see how peoples changing into something that is just shadow of theyr great life. It is beautiful to see that polizist take care of dementia patients, it gives a bit of hope into better world, we need to take care of thos elders.
Cancer can often have the same effect. It's heartbreaking seeing a loved one losing sight of reality and not knowing who's who. No, you can't contradict them or tell them the truth, they don't understand and will only confuse or upset them; and you can tell them the same thing over and over and it will not sink in.
I work with dementia residents In a care home & hope they did ring social services so Norma can get the care & help she needs to live out the rest of her days supported & looked after & ease family worrying case she goes awol again & the next person who finds Norma may not b so kind 💞 .
Poor soul, My maternal granny had dementia, my mum said when she was first diagnosed that she hope she would die quick, she had it for 23 years and died on her 93rd birthday my mum said at least she got a good birthday present, I was so shocked and upset at my mum saying that but a while later I understood my granny wasn't in mental pain. Great work officers and the member of the public.
It's so incredibly sad, dementia is such a horrendous illness. I heard that it is hereditary and my great grandmother had it, and my grandmother has it now, and my mother and I have extremely poor memories so am predicting it will also be the case for myself. I can't imagine how confused that Norma must be bless her, oh, and thank you to that kind lady who helped her... its people like you that make the world a better place. 🙂🙏
My mum worked at an old peoples home and residents would sometimes go out and get lost. A 103 y/o woman always asked me for cigarettes or bus fare. Lovely people I met there.
My Nan got Dementia in 2013 after she had a medical issue where she basically died, my grandad revived her, and the paramedics did there work, her dementia formed following that incident, her brain oxygen levels were 0. The decline was mentally destroying to watch. She died in 2019 in my arms while I sung her favorite song to her, but to be honest I'm happy she passed before the start of the pandemic because I'd hate to think of what would have happened if COVID got hold of her.
In cases like this it’s best to not challenge them and correct them. Though they won’t remember they will be left feeling sad and annoyed with themselves and will forget why they feel sad and annoyed. So it’s best to let them think what they are thinking and not correcting them. Bless her
My neigbour had dementia too and he was taken care of by his wife. One day, she had gone to the supermarket and he had found the spare key and left. We searched for over an hour until the police came with him in the back seat. By pure luck they had spotted him at a busstop acting confused. They had stopped because it was a holiday and no busses were coming to that stop that day.
Alzhimers and vascular dementia is such an horrific illness, going through it with the mother in law, not easy at the best of times, calling in every other day to see if there's anything she needs
This is so sad. I remember a few years ago when my mum was hospitalized. There was an elderly woman sharing her room who had fallen and I think broke her hip or her wrist. That poor woman was on a 5 minute timer. Asked and said the same things over and over. “What day is it? It’s hair day. What’s for dinner? Where am I? Why am I here?” Her granddaughter was in the room and told us she had to stop changing her hair colour otherwise her grandmother wouldn’t remember her. Thankfully she was cared for round the clock but it was still sad to see her so confused.
Not really, it was wrong of them to constantly correct her and reinforce reality. With people with dementia, telling them that their mum couldn’t be alive because she said her mum was in her 80s and she was 83 and that “didn’t make sense”. It was just plain cruel. People with dementia being told that they’re confused just makes them more confused and scared. Instead of telling them they’re wrong, it’s important to go along with it and redirect. For example, saying “your mum’s not home at the moment, but we can call your family and see who is home so we can get to them” instead of “your mum doesn’t live here anymore, she’s dead because you’re 83” would be far more respectful and empathetic.
Pretty sad that she’s been left without a need to contact social services, just in case she doesn’t have carers. What if she had no children or relatives?
I’ve worked with people who have complex mental health issues such as dementia, and I can’t imagine how terrifying it must be to absolutely convinced by your mind that the scenario is real when it sometimes is not. I think that the support sometimes for these people isn’t enough. I think that as we have an ageing population we need to educate more people on things like dementia, and that loneliness has a big factor in making a person more distressed. I used to look after a couple who were diagnosed with early onset dementia at the start of the first lock down. They used to go down the pub every evening and not having that social interaction really affected them, they used to think that the delivery drivers were poisoning there drinks, and tried setting the house on fire. I think that we all as a society need to do more to combat loneliness for everyone and then as a society we will be a lot happier.
This is heartbreaking, of course, but what I find especially chilling is the thought of what might have happened if she hadn't been helped. It's all too easy to imagine her dying in some dark alley, cold and confused and alone.
This lovely lady should not be living alone, I wish her nephew could let her live with him or him with her. This is heartbreaking to watch, I hope she's alright.
Luckily my dad is still a fit man , even at 82. And is able to care for my mum , who's disappearing from us all with dementia. It's an utterly horrible disease , which destroys a person's brain ,until virtually nothing remains of the person you knew before . My mum's gone from independent, to barely even leaving the house . Her short term memory is so degraded ,she will ask you the same thing over and over again . My mum and dad , who should be enjoying the golden years , are now locked in an ever ending cycle of her rages , tantrums , tears and frustrations. But my dad is from a generation who stayed together , no matter what . So while I want to help , I'm help at bay , while he copes the best he can . The best you can ever do , I just be patient and be prepared to step in too help .
My gran had dementia towards the end, she forgot who her sons and daughters were and that she had gran kids and great gran kids, she forgot that her husband passed away and that she no longer lived in Crawley. This lasted for 2 years till she passed and it was hard trying to explain to her daily who these people are and why they are trying to help as to her we all became strangers she couldn't trust. She passed peacefully and we remeber her for who she was and loved her till the end.
I was a bit annoyed with the female police officer for getting a bit frustrated with her and telling her she was confused, it doesn't help them, they are not aware that their behaviour is not their normal behaviour, the lady that found her spoke to her more humanely. The officer's attitude did improve once they got her into the car, and you could clearly then see the difference in the older woman's attitude. I looked after my mum who had early onset alzheimers for 9 years and they genuinely have no idea that have a problem, except in the small time of lucidity they may get, so need your extreme compassion and patience at all times, they don't do these things to annoy you, it's beyond there control.
I worked briefly at a care home recently. They had a dementia ward. A woman comes one day for 2 weeks to give her husband a break. About every 2 hours, this woman walked around saying she needed to meet her husband her husbands coming for her. And I would just tell her she's here on holiday. Another hour would pass and she'd start wandering again. Another woman, she believed she was 22. Was going to see her mum. She was in her 80s.
Oh love her. My Grandad had Alzheimers and he had episodes like this quite often, my dad had to go get him at 5am because he'd walked over to a school that he was a caretaker at thinking he had work 😢
Well done to the person who tried to get her home and called the police to get Norma help.
Exactly what I was thinking. Good for her. X
You can tell she's been raised by fantastic parents.
I loved how warmly convincing she was. Just "Well you have a nice warm home and it's cold tonight so why don't you hear home now". So kind!
@B The really sad part about that is , she was just being a decent human , its a real shame a lot of people would not
That lady that called the police was an ANGEL. Vulnerable people all to often fall victim to some wicked people.
@GozzaCraft I think you'd be really surprised, most wouldn't. At least not go that far, most may order the taxi for her but beyond that was going above so fair play to the girl.
I know. I wish we had more people who are like this when it is coming to helping valuable people, day or night to be honest.
good people, they are everywhere :)
911 likes, so I'm not liking your comment :D
@JustGarryGamesYou’d think but no. I went to a very similar job where a member of the public waited for us and stopped the man from running away. At least 50 to 100 cars drove by and paid no notice. Very few people actually watch out for elderly or disabled people in this country.
My friend works with elderly people and she says it's far kinder to just distract them rather than tell them the bald truth. For example, she had one patient who kept getting out of bed and trying to get dressed in the middle of the night and saying she had to get her children from school. Other nurses would say "Your kids aren't in school anymore...they're grown up" and it would distress her, My friend used to say 'Oh it's too early still Mavis...you've got hours yet. Pop your pyjamas back on and we'll go together later when it's time" and Mavis would be happy with that and get back in bed. She'd get so distressed when the others told her they'd all grown up!
You are exactly right.
thats true - my godfather has dementia and something his carers have told us (my family and myself) is that you should always keep in mind their emotions. for example, if he asks about a family member who has passed, dont tell him that theyre deceased, because for them its like hearing that news for the first time all over again and re-processing it emotionally. if he asks about them or for them just pretend as though theyre busy, or else youre constantly subjecting them to this terrible news over and over for what feels like the first time each time to them. its so disheartening to hear about
You are so right, I just go into there world works most time.. This police officer needs dementia training as do quite q few hospital workers…
My great grandmother would just say over and over "I need to go get the children, I need to go and get the children." It was very hard to witness
@@phina8392 completely agree with you x x
The girl that picked Norma up and phoned the police was adorable. You can tell everything about a person by how they treat the most vulnerable...
Gosh she shouldn’t be living alone. I hope she has regular carers.
Ikr
Exactly.
I watched this and it told us at the end she went into a home
My Gran had this and each time I visited her at the care home, she would ask "How's Granddad?" and "When is he coming to visit?". It was very upsetting for her and myself when I explained he was no longer with us. After the third time I decided to tell her Granddad is fine and he's busy in the shed, she would smile and say "he's never out of that bloody shed". This was the only time I've lied to her but I can live with that.
That’s called a therapeutic lie, it’s the right thing to do for dementia sufferers don’t worry x
I sincerely refuse calling that a lie. A lie to me implies 1. me having an advantage bevor the one that gets lied to, 2. the one getting lied to has a disadvantage from this. So not just an advantage but a disadvantage has to be involved and thirdly the lie must come from a bad „will“. You don’t want anything bad for her. Quite the opposite. Therefore you did everything right. Besides that, what else is there to do that would result in something productive. It’s „unproductive“ to me to break people on daily basis.
I cared for a gentleman with dementia. His daughter and wife had passed but we never told him otherwise. His remaining families decided not to tell him about their funerals as he wouldn't have understood. He died about a year ago non the wiser and it was wonderful to think that in his world, everyone he loved dearly was still living.
I used to lie to my grandma too. She kept asking where my granddad was and we just told her that he was on the loo, out shopping or working in the garden. She usually asked once every 2 to 5 minutes. It's not nice to lie of course, but the truth would hurt even more.
ha ha ha .. typical grandmother response "He's never out of that bloody shed" ha ha ha .. I can almost hear her tone cause that is EXACTLY what my grandma would've replied. LOL
Brian served in the Life Guards and was a police Inspector. Norma was a nurse. Two wonderful, upstanding, respectable people who faithfully served the public and this is what it comes down to. Norma deserves to be cared for the way she cared for others - with kindness, compassion and love.
Sadly the elderly are treated quite poorly here in England, a lot of the time it falls on their younger family members to provide care, not the NHS as it can become quite costly to have care two times a day for them (NHS is in bad shape if you hadn't heard), and if the elderly don't have a supportive family, well, stuff like this can happen.
I do give credit for our Police for trying to provide care though when they can.
What a lovely girl helping her and calling 999
Yes i hope some good carma comes her way she deserves it. 🇬🇧👍❤️
god thats hard to watch. dementia is so awful. that poor woman believing her mother's alive and her husband's alive. poor lost soul.
She can still remember things from a long time ago but she has forgotten things that have happened more recently. That is what happens with Alzheimers
@@digitallifeline162 Not just that, eventually she’ll forget everything. You forget how to walk, how to eat, how to dress and eventually, how to breathe.
My Grandmother has just been diagnosed with Alzheimers, she lives with me and that is where she will stay.
Hope she does ok sorry to hear
It’s honestly the cruelest disease ❤️
My Grandmother has had Alzheimer’s for 10 years and lives in an aged care facility here in Australia. I can say that allowing your Grandmother to live in your home is the best decision you will ever make. Nothing compares to living with family who don’t need to be paid to love and care for you - best of luck on your journey
Sorry about your Grandmother, it is very horrible disease and I wouldn't even wish it on my worst enemy
You're a wonderful granddaughter caring and loving.
Dementia is the cruelest of diseases.. Absolutely heart breaking. And BLESS that young woman who got in the taxi with her.
Bless her ☹️ we need to keep our hearts open to the elderly especially with dementia
As someone who works with Dementia the first sign you know someone has it is they start asking for their parents. It's far kinder to play along with them than tell them the truth. They live in a time that no longer exists and nothing can convince them otherwise, which is heartbreaking for their families.
We ALL have a duty of care to the elderly
exactly totally agree pal
We don't have a duty of care to anyone.
Go and live in the wilderness on your own then if you don’t want to be a part of a humane society that looks after the vulnerable within it
@@Killerkwoi13 U talking to me?
@@bruhmoment...1350 and that is literally why the world is like it is. because no one gives a fuck about anyone, and look where its got us...
My great aunt is 80 and has Dementia and kept talking about being with her mother. The aid workers thought she was crazy again but my great grandmother is actually 103 and still alive.
Omg!!
Hawaii , 🍀🙃😃😃😃
ha ha ha .. oh that is a hilarious and heartwarming story .... :) as the nurses roll their eyes and say "oh poor lady" it would've been AWESOME if her mother did walk in LOL
We tend to think of our parents or grandparents when we see videos like this, but what broke my heart this time was the thought of this being my daughter in the future, trying to get home to us after we're long gone. So, so sad.
What a lovely kind lady who helped that poor woman, more people like you needed in this world.
when the police officer picked up his police hat that really turned my water works on
The member of the public who must of paid for and got in that cab with Norma to make sure she got home ok is a true and beautiful human and deserves so much credit for the way this situation ended. The police were amazing but so was that female that called it in.
Bless the woman who stayed with her, not many people would do this and there are so many that go missing.
The woman who stayed with her and called is amazing. Very grateful for her. My grandpa died of dementia, at the end he couldn’t even sit up or speak. Just laid there and babbled at the ceiling. Heart shattering doesn’t begin to describe it. God I really hope she’s got regular carers though.
My best friend’s granny passed from dementia last October. The last lucid moment she had, i walkedby her room, and she asked what i was up to. I told her honestly, “we’re gonna go watch movies in the other room, we’ll keep it down” and she told me “watch good ones, I’ll be watching my tv”
And the following weekend she passed in her sleep. I don’t know why I was the one to witness her last moment, but she’d known me since i was in high school and called me her other grandkid and we’d tell family stories back and forth when she first started forgetting things. Later on she thought I was either her family member or her friend. I miss Granny terribly. I’m glad she was sleeping when she passed though, it seems much more peaceful.
I gonna make sure to take care of my parents in their old age. I promise
Such a lovely lady. Such a shame she has to have a disease such as this. The fear and confusion she must’ve been feeling and she’s still sweet and kind.
Those officers are fantastic! They really took their time with Ms. Norma. So heartwarming to see!
This is absolutely heartbreaking... God Bless Norma and Brian
Lovely girl who took care of this poor soul with such kindness and patience until the police took over.
Thanks to the kind lady to helped her. Breaks your heart
I know the job is unbelievably difficult but that female PC really needs some dementia training
What could she have done any different?
She yanked the bag out of the ladies hand and she wasn't being very understanding when she was talking to her @sickeningnoandrealfierceto
No. She handled the situation perfectly.
This is heartbreaking. It just shows how instead of us all being hateful and divided. We should all love one another and get along. 💜
I hope Donna receives the appropriate training. It was painful to watch her lack of awareness at times.
'It doesn't fall to anyone really' - says it all. Could have said, 'we all have a responsibility and a part to play'.
Yeah, the bag grabbing, the math about her mum and herself - I cringed several times. Her heart’s absolutely in the right place, it’s a hard thing to manage, I’d love for them to just get some additional training.
@@grayskindablue me toooo
@@grayskindablue The prettiest Emergency Responders are very often self centred which makes them a bit narcissistic . For every unpleasant member of the Forces there are hundreds of amazingly kind ones who are beautiful inside and out .I think everyone is externally beautiful and that beauty shines through .
@@suzannelacy8093 what on earth does her appearance have to do with anything?
Yeah, it's clear she is trained to deal with drunks, roughens, etc... but not vulnerable elderly people. I think she realised after a while, as didn't correct her about her husband.
When we moved into our new home. There was a lady that came up on her porch and walked right in our house and elderly lady I offered her a cup of coffee she thought it was one of her family members. And we had to call the police and they took her back that the facility where she was living. It breaks my heart to see them like that. She didn't know that we were not her family
She’s a very kind older woman even though she’s clearly confused. My husband’s grandma had dementia and it made her extremely mean and paranoid.
Dementia is the biggest concern I have for my family, especially those who don't have a partner. I wish with every fibre of my being that a cure can be found.
This hits way too close to home, I really identify with the male officers’ story- Dementia takes everything from the people we love the most
Bless her man she shouldn't be living alone
As soon as she talked about Brian visiting his parents I just couldn’t take it anymore.. this is probably the first thing I’ve seen on TH-cam that’s made my ducts weep..
Oh gosh, my heart’s breaking watching this. I’m just happy she met a Good Samaritan. Poor pet.
I am going through this with a 95 year old. I would not wish this on my worst enemy. It’s torture.
I had a situation like this in my local shopping area. Elderly gentleman, nice as they come asking where a certain shop was. I said that I would show him, he asked about another shop he had to go to that had been closed for over ten years. When I told him, he became very confused and said he could not remember how he got from his house. After a few more questions, it was clear he was lost, he could not remember his name, age or where he lived. He got a bit upset as he was worried he would get in trouble bless him. I hold him that it was no worry and just wanted to make sure he was safe. Took him to a local cafe and called the police who came and took him home. As it turned out, he had been reported missing earlier that day by his family who were all looking for him. He was very thankful to me and my mum for helping him and we were just glad he was able to get home to his family safe. Please, I really encourage that if you ever find someone in this situation, please do what you can to help them as sadly we all know the horrible people who would take advantage,
The way she said “put that in love” was adorable u can’t not love the elderly
There is insufficient background to know the circumstances of Norma's situation, but clearly her needs now have to be attended to by social services (though please not think they are staffed enough to deal with every case). My mother, in the early stages of dementia, wished to be independent, and would walk into our local town, shop, then find she couldn't remember how to get back home. Twice she was brought back home by police (I made sure her address was in her purse) and once I was called by Tesco Metro just up the road, and once by a caring woman who trailed her back home. It really does break my heart to think this, as the policeman says, is a daily occurrence.
That member of the public was an angel! She was also better at dealing with this poor soul than the police were. My Grandmother had dementia, and i thank my life she never got this far. Its an awful illness
Outside a shop in Windsor Ontario two months ago, there was an older lady struggling to use her smart phone to call a taxi.
I told her that smart phones can be complicated for people of any age and we had a laugh. I phoned a taxi for her and she was grateful. However, after I packed my trunk and drove on to another store, I felt really BAD that I just didn't ask her where she lived and driven her home myself. I went back to the location and she was gone so the Taxi did come and collect her.
In life, we should all do whatever is necessary to help the elderly, god willing we will be there one day too and will hope the younger generations help us.
Never try to argue with someone who seems confused - just makes it worse.
Try to distract them and take it from there - just as these cops did!
Norma really shouldn’t live on her own
God that's heavy. That poor 83 year old woman claiming her 80-something year old mum lives in that house even though the mum has probably been dead 25+ years.
Sadly that's how it ends up with this , the brain and memory just turn to mush , its awful
Aww, what a sweet little old lady 🥺 how sad for her
What the policeman says at 5:50 is so relatable,
My grandmother was cursed with dementia, and it's crazy how quickly it escalates, in a matter of 2-3 years she went from being a obstinate person to a shell of her former self, left in a state of confusion who didnt even know who we were, my father included (her own (only) son).
It is heartbreaking, when she's not the person I remembered growing up as a kid and transitioning into my adult years.
aw god bless her heart...dementia is a horrific disease - the way it affects their loved ones etc...glad to see compassion from the PD
I cried when she asked if she saw Brian 🥺
We all owe the lovely lady who stopped a HUGE thank.you .That could be us one day, or our children/parents .
I experienced this first hand, though not dementia. My mum was dying of stomach cancer. Near the end she was on a bunch of medications that left her drifting through a bunch of old memories mashed up together. She'd know where she was one minute, and then another asked me how the trip to the city center was.
Oh poor luv, feel so sorry for her. This actually made me cry 😔
I work as a Healthcare assistant. And work with elderly people with Alzheimer's and dementia. And that lady did the right thing trying to help this old lady
This is how I see the police. They protect us. Thank you
Awwwm this breaks my heart ❤ 💔 😢 knowing she's still looking for Brian honestly so sad there many people out there like this dementia is terrible
I was told that it's always kinder to enter their world. People with Dementia must have routine and need to feel safe. My mum used to ask me where her daddy was, and once called me "mummy" If you argue or correct them they get stressed and upset, they don't understand so please don't do it. I actually enjoyed entering my mother's world. You're not lying, because they believe whatever they're saying at the time. We had wonderful slightly obscure conversations that brought me so much closer to her. She made me laugh too. My favourite memory is of her sleeping, snuggled up in my arms squashed up together on her single bed as I comforted her after she'd become distressed in the night again. She had become my child. She's been gone 3yrs now, but lovely memories.
them two feds that looked after that old lady they have my total respect
To be honest most police officers are decent people , they get a bad wrap a lot but often by people who are in the wrong , considering they are doing a job for our safety and are there 24/7 at the end of a phone we should respect them more really , when the shit hits the fan they are the ones most would call
I work with dementia patients have done for 21 years. The best way to go is to agree with them and distract them. Kindnesses..patience and compassion towards them all the way ❤
Thank Goodness that woman helped her and stayed with her untill the police came,anything could of happened to the poor lady.I hope she can get someone to look after her.This breaks my heart my father had dementia and it is a sad thing.
"is your husband alive?"
"oh i hope so!"
im not crying theres just something in my eye
I feel so bad for her. She seems like an absolute sweetheart. Dementia is horrible
i was almost bike jacked the other week by motorbike thieves and when the police came out that graham mcshane was one of the coppers that came out, nice decent guy he was
My mother has dementia. I hope most people would behave like the lovely woman who found her. The police officers could do with training but they tried their best and are fairly compassionate here.
What a kind lady.
Even in a lost mind where one cannot know themselves, they always want to find their way home to their mother, but alas, her mother was no longer there.
Im crying like a kid, for me is very sad everytime I hear about dementia my grandpa got it and it is heart breaking when you see how peoples changing into something that is just shadow of theyr great life. It is beautiful to see that polizist take care of dementia patients, it gives a bit of hope into better world, we need to take care of thos elders.
Ah man just burst into tears watching this
Cancer can often have the same effect. It's heartbreaking seeing a loved one losing sight of reality and not knowing who's who. No, you can't contradict them or tell them the truth, they don't understand and will only confuse or upset them; and you can tell them the same thing over and over and it will not sink in.
I work with dementia residents In a care home & hope they did ring social services so Norma can get the care & help she needs to live out the rest of her days supported & looked after & ease family worrying case she goes awol again & the next person who finds Norma may not b so kind 💞 .
I watched this episode and thought, there but for the grace of God go I, it's such an insidious disease.
Oh and well done to the person who found her.
Lovely officers and a beautiful woman…the way we must treat everyone in this cold confused world….
Poor soul, My maternal granny had dementia, my mum said when she was first diagnosed that she hope she would die quick, she had it for 23 years and died on her 93rd birthday my mum said at least she got a good birthday present, I was so shocked and upset at my mum saying that but a while later I understood my granny wasn't in mental pain. Great work officers and the member of the public.
THANK YOU BEAUTIFUL PEOPLES.
AMEN.
LOVE LIFTED ME.
It's so incredibly sad, dementia is such a horrendous illness. I heard that it is hereditary and my great grandmother had it, and my grandmother has it now, and my mother and I have extremely poor memories so am predicting it will also be the case for myself. I can't imagine how confused that Norma must be bless her, oh, and thank you to that kind lady who helped her... its people like you that make the world a better place. 🙂🙏
Very sad, dementia is a weird disease he’s dead and she thinks he’s just gone to visit his parents, sad
My mum worked at an old peoples home and residents would sometimes go out and get lost. A 103 y/o woman always asked me for cigarettes or bus fare. Lovely people I met there.
My Nan got Dementia in 2013 after she had a medical issue where she basically died, my grandad revived her, and the paramedics did there work, her dementia formed following that incident, her brain oxygen levels were 0. The decline was mentally destroying to watch.
She died in 2019 in my arms while I sung her favorite song to her, but to be honest I'm happy she passed before the start of the pandemic because I'd hate to think of what would have happened if COVID got hold of her.
Falls to us all, sweetie! Such a moving piece x
In cases like this it’s best to not challenge them and correct them. Though they won’t remember they will be left feeling sad and annoyed with themselves and will forget why they feel sad and annoyed. So it’s best to let them think what they are thinking and not correcting them. Bless her
I miss my grandparents every single day......
My neigbour had dementia too and he was taken care of by his wife. One day, she had gone to the supermarket and he had found the spare key and left. We searched for over an hour until the police came with him in the back seat. By pure luck they had spotted him at a busstop acting confused. They had stopped because it was a holiday and no busses were coming to that stop that day.
Alzhimers and vascular dementia is such an horrific illness, going through it with the mother in law, not easy at the best of times, calling in every other day to see if there's anything she needs
This is so sad. I remember a few years ago when my mum was hospitalized. There was an elderly woman sharing her room who had fallen and I think broke her hip or her wrist. That poor woman was on a 5 minute timer. Asked and said the same things over and over. “What day is it? It’s hair day. What’s for dinner? Where am I? Why am I here?” Her granddaughter was in the room and told us she had to stop changing her hair colour otherwise her grandmother wouldn’t remember her. Thankfully she was cared for round the clock but it was still sad to see her so confused.
Glad how they treated her with respect
Not really, it was wrong of them to constantly correct her and reinforce reality. With people with dementia, telling them that their mum couldn’t be alive because she said her mum was in her 80s and she was 83 and that “didn’t make sense”. It was just plain cruel. People with dementia being told that they’re confused just makes them more confused and scared. Instead of telling them they’re wrong, it’s important to go along with it and redirect.
For example, saying “your mum’s not home at the moment, but we can call your family and see who is home so we can get to them” instead of “your mum doesn’t live here anymore, she’s dead because you’re 83” would be far more respectful and empathetic.
Pretty sad that she’s been left without a need to contact social services, just in case she doesn’t have carers. What if she had no children or relatives?
I think she will have some form of care package, because her walking aid had come from the hospital and she wouldn’t be discharged without it
@@caram6073 As sad as it sounds , unless people can get 24/ hour care they are better off in homes where they have safety guaranteed
I think she had a nephew it said at the end she went into a home
The moment she picked up the hat 😢
I’ve worked with people who have complex mental health issues such as dementia, and I can’t imagine how terrifying it must be to absolutely convinced by your mind that the scenario is real when it sometimes is not.
I think that the support sometimes for these people isn’t enough. I think that as we have an ageing population we need to educate more people on things like dementia, and that loneliness has a big factor in making a person more distressed. I used to look after a couple who were diagnosed with early onset dementia at the start of the first lock down.
They used to go down the pub every evening and not having that social interaction really affected them, they used to think that the delivery drivers were poisoning there drinks, and tried setting the house on fire. I think that we all as a society need to do more to combat loneliness for everyone and then as a society we will be a lot happier.
6:16 that looks like some kind of spirit floating passed there.!
Its falls on all of us. Good work officers.
This is heartbreaking, of course, but what I find especially chilling is the thought of what might have happened if she hadn't been helped. It's all too easy to imagine her dying in some dark alley, cold and confused and alone.
Or beaten up and robbed by some piece of garbage.
They make tracking devices for dementia patients. The family might want to invest in one.
bless her heart
This lovely lady should not be living alone, I wish her nephew could let her live with him or him with her. This is heartbreaking to watch, I hope she's alright.
Luckily my dad is still a fit man , even at 82. And is able to care for my mum , who's disappearing from us all with dementia.
It's an utterly horrible disease , which destroys a person's brain ,until virtually nothing remains of the person you knew before .
My mum's gone from independent, to barely even leaving the house . Her short term memory is so degraded ,she will ask you the same thing over and over again .
My mum and dad , who should be enjoying the golden years , are now locked in an ever ending cycle of her rages , tantrums , tears and frustrations.
But my dad is from a generation who stayed together , no matter what . So while I want to help , I'm help at bay , while he copes the best he can .
The best you can ever do , I just be patient and be prepared to step in too help .
That's not a easy position, but fuck me man good job, you're doing all you can and I respect that
@@ImperialCommissarRikart Thanks 🙏
My gran had dementia towards the end, she forgot who her sons and daughters were and that she had gran kids and great gran kids, she forgot that her husband passed away and that she no longer lived in Crawley. This lasted for 2 years till she passed and it was hard trying to explain to her daily who these people are and why they are trying to help as to her we all became strangers she couldn't trust. She passed peacefully and we remeber her for who she was and loved her till the end.
She's in her 80s, I'm 83. Bless her😂😂
Bless the lovcely woman that helped her out. Gotta give the fuzz some credit too ;)
I was a bit annoyed with the female police officer for getting a bit frustrated with her and telling her she was confused, it doesn't help them, they are not aware that their behaviour is not their normal behaviour, the lady that found her spoke to her more humanely. The officer's attitude did improve once they got her into the car, and you could clearly then see the difference in the older woman's attitude. I looked after my mum who had early onset alzheimers for 9 years and they genuinely have no idea that have a problem, except in the small time of lucidity they may get, so need your extreme compassion and patience at all times, they don't do these things to annoy you, it's beyond there control.
I worked briefly at a care home recently. They had a dementia ward. A woman comes one day for 2 weeks to give her husband a break. About every 2 hours, this woman walked around saying she needed to meet her husband her husbands coming for her. And I would just tell her she's here on holiday. Another hour would pass and she'd start wandering again. Another woman, she believed she was 22. Was going to see her mum. She was in her 80s.
Oh love her. My Grandad had Alzheimers and he had episodes like this quite often, my dad had to go get him at 5am because he'd walked over to a school that he was a caretaker at thinking he had work 😢
💔