Hi Readers, the topic of dementia and guns is controversial, as I learned when I first presented this topic on television a few years ago. As I started making my presentation based on facts from research, a man texted the host and wrote, “Dr. White, you’re not getting your hands on my guns!” Similar texts followed.
People with dementia should NOT have guns or be anywhere around guns. Loss of short-term and/or long-term memory leave them vulnerable to injury or death to themselves and others around them. While these assaults are unintentional, as a gerontologist, I know firsthand that guns and dementia is a DANGEROUS combination. My mother ran out of her house and into a neighbor’s backyard because her husband [my stepdad] did not recognize her and tried to shoot her with a rifle. Although he experienced previous spells of not knowing her, Mother thought his memory loss was completely harmless. Until that day.
Please read
this article from MedPage Today and pass it along to your family and
friends. More later. AgeDoc
Preventing Gun Violence in
Patients with Dementia
— Gun safety advocate Emmy
Betz, MD, MPH, offers advice
by Shannon Firth,
Washington Correspondent, MedPage Today September 23, 2021
Ways to reduce the risk of
violence from firearms by people with dementia were described during a webinar
hosted earlier this week by the
BulletPoints Project, an initiative that was authorized and funded by California's state legislature in collaboration with
the University of California.
Five
million Americans, or 1.6% of the population, have Alzheimer's dementia or
related dementias. This number is projected to double by 2060, according to
BulletPoints.
About one
in three adults over age 65 own a gun, while another 12% live with a
gun owner, said gun safety advocate Emmy Betz, MD, MPH, an emergency physician
at the University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, during the webinar.
The
precise number of people with dementia who have access to guns is unclear. One
survey from a dementia clinic found that 60% of families reported having a gun
in the home, but Betz suggested that is "probably on the high end."
While
the numbers may be fuzzy, what is clear is that changes in personality, behavior,
and cognition -- all symptoms of dementia -- can increase the risk of firearm
injury, said Betz, who is also director of the Firearm Injury Prevention
Initiative at the Injury & Violence Prevention Center at the University of
Colorado.
When to Intervene
In
offering her advice on preventing gun violence among people with dementia, Betz
noted that there is no "gold standard set of rules." Dementia
presents across a certain trajectory, Betz said. A person can have mild
objective deficits, identified primarily through testing, but continue to be
able to engage in the typical aspects of daily living, such as driving and
grocery shopping. As the disease progresses, people with dementia may begin to
show memory loss that can impede at least one of these aspects, she noted.
Later,
as more "profound impairment" sets in, they may start to show
behavioral symptoms, including hostility or aggression and lose the ability to
recognize friends and family.
But
during these earlier stages of mild cognitive impairment is when clinicians and
others should "ideally" engage the older adult directly and empower
them to begin making decisions and planning for future changes. This can
include discussing access to firearms, the kitchen, and driving.
Ways
to reduce the risk of violence from firearms by people with dementia were
described during a webinar hosted earlier this week by the
BulletPoints Project, an initiative that was authorized and funded by California's state legislature in collaboration with
the University of California.
Five
million Americans, or 1.6% of the population, have Alzheimer's dementia or
related dementias. This number is projected to double by 2060, according to
BulletPoints.
About one
in three adults over age 65 own a gun, while another 12% live with a
gun owner, said gun safety advocate Emmy Betz, MD, MPH, an emergency physician
at the University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, during the webinar.
The
precise number of people with dementia who have access to guns is unclear. One
survey from a dementia clinic found that 60% of families reported having a gun
in the home, but Betz suggested that is "probably on the high end."
While
the numbers may be fuzzy, what is clear is that changes in personality, behavior,
and cognition -- all symptoms of dementia -- can increase the risk of firearm
injury, said Betz, who is also director of the Firearm Injury Prevention
Initiative at the Injury & Violence Prevention Center at the University of
Colorado.
"We
want to support independent healthy aging and rights of older adults for as
long as possible, but recogniz[e] that ... in the progression of dementia,
there comes a point when someone probably is no longer safe to have
access" to firearms, she added.
When to Intervene
In offering her advice on
preventing gun violence among people with dementia, Betz noted that there is no
"gold standard set of rules."
Dementia
presents across a certain trajectory, Betz said. A person can have mild
objective deficits, identified primarily through testing, but continue to be
able to engage in the typical aspects of daily living, such as driving and
grocery shopping. As the disease progresses, people with dementia may begin to
show memory loss that can impede at least one of these aspects, she noted.
Later,
as more "profound impairment" sets in, they may start to show
behavioral symptoms, including hostility or aggression and lose the ability to
recognize friends and family.
But during these earlier
stages of mild cognitive impairment is when clinicians and others should
"ideally" engage the older adult directly and empower them to begin
making decisions and planning for future changes. This can include discussing
access to firearms, the kitchen, and driving.
Asked
whether there are observable behaviors that would indicate that it's time to
intervene, Betz said the focus should be on the person's memory and their
ability to recognize others.
"So,
if somebody is really not recognizing trusted ... family members, for example,
that to me is a big red flag, because it could ... pose a risk in the middle of
the night, say, to the family members, or could pose a risk to somebody else
coming over to the house," she added.
Betz
recalled a 2015 incident, where a woman named Dee Hill, 75, of The Dalles,
Oregon, was shot in the stomach by her husband, Darrell Hill, a former local
police chief, who had dementia, as reported by PBS in 2018. Her husband was used to seeing his guns
daily, Betz explained, and had persuaded her to let him at least look at one of
them. "She thought it was empty," she added. Hill survived the
shooting, but it took 30 pints of blood and a 7-week hospital stay, according
to PBS.
Betz
also warned caregivers to look for "significant behavior changes,"
including agitation, aggression, paranoia, and "new symptoms that were not
part of the way they used to be."
While a person with dementia
may have the strength and the ability to use a firearm, the question to ask is
whether they can do so responsibly.
"Can
they think through their actions and the ramifications of potentially shooting
someone?" Betz posed. If not, she urged friends, family, and caregivers to
"trust your gut ... imagine if something happened to them or to someone
else in the household."
Betz
also stressed that the primary concern around firearms and dementia isn't
homicide, but suicide. The use of a firearm is the most common means of suicide
among people with dementia; 73% of suicide deaths in those with dementia were
due to a firearm in comparison with 50% of suicide deaths in people of all
ages.
Ways to Intervene
As
for potential policy levers that might address these issues, Betz pointed out
that only two states have legislation related to brain illness and firearms. Hawaii
prohibits possession of a firearm if a person has an "organic brain
syndrome," but there isn't any clear distinction around the severity of
the disease and it's unclear how effectively the law has been applied.
In
Texas, a person with dementia is prohibited from carrying a handgun, but that
individual may still purchase a handgun or possess one, noted Betz. In
addition, federal background checks for firearms include "antiquated
language" around a person being "a mental defective," and while
theoretically that could prevent a sale if the condition was logged, Betz said
it's unlikely that someone with dementia would be flagged and blocked from
buying a gun.
Some
states also have Extreme Risk Protection Orders or "Red Flag"
laws, which are another potential tool that caregivers can consider if the
person with dementia is the gun owner, Betz noted. These are essentially
"gun violence restraining orders," she said, and they are issued when
a court deems an individual a risk to self or others.

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