A Teenager Steps Up to Help People Living with Alzheimer's By Sometimes the mother of invention isnΓÇÖt necessity, itΓÇÖs a 15-year old boy scout. Kenneth Shinozuka wants to become a neuroscientist and find a cure for AlzheimerΓÇÖs, a disease that has nearly incapacitated his grandfather. Someday, he may well accomplish this goal, but right now Shinozuka is still in high school, and instead of a cure, he has invented something that will help millions of people who have AlzheimerΓÇÖs. Shinozuka calls his device Safe Wander and it is aimed at people with memory loss who also wander. Wandering is exactly what ShinozukaΓÇÖs grandfather, Deming, has done for several years. Deming was diagnosed with AlzheimerΓÇÖs disease eleven years ago when Shinozuka was only a youngster. His family worried about his grandfatherΓÇÖs safety, especially after Deming wandered away one evening and was found by police on a freeway a full two miles from home. Another concern was the additional burden the wandering placed on ShinozukaΓÇÖs aunt, who is DemingΓÇÖs primary caregiver. In an interview he gave to Fast Company, Shinozuka talked about the wander issue, ΓÇ£About two years ago, my grandfather started wandering out of bed, which caused a lot of accidents,ΓÇ¥ he says. ΓÇ£My aunt had to stay awake all night to keep an eye on him and, even then, often failed to catch him leaving the bed.ΓÇ¥ Shinozuka thought this was a problem he could solve. He went to work and created Safe Wander, a small, thin pressure sensor worn on the bottom of a personΓÇÖs foot or with a sock. The device detects any increase in pressure and the sensor wirelessly sends an alert to a caregiverΓÇÖs smartphone. Now when ShinozukaΓÇÖs grandfather gets out of bed at night, Safe Wander alerts his aunt via an app (which he also designed) on her smartphone. So far, the device has successfully alerted 437 times with no false reports. Not only is Safe Wander accurate, it is also quiet. Other wander detection devices are often uncomfortable for the person to wear and they often make loud noises, which can traumatize the person who is wandering as well as frighten other residents. You may be thinking: ThatΓÇÖs a cool invention, but is there really a market for such a device? According to the AlzheimerΓÇÖs Association, about 60 percent of the 5.3 million American living with AlzheimerΓÇÖs wander, most often at night. This invention will help all of these people as well as the millions of caregivers who are going without sleep. When Shinozuka was profiled recently on NBC Nightly News, he indicated he wants to focus his career on finding solutions for those with AlzheimerΓÇÖs disease. ΓÇ£IΓÇÖd like to solve some of the mysteries of the brain, and invent tools to ultimately, I think, cure AlzheimerΓÇÖs and other mental conditions that our aging population suffers from,ΓÇ¥ he said. Personally, reading about ShinozukaΓÇÖs invention and his future goals makes me feel a tiny bit more confident that a cure will be found for AlzheimerΓÇÖs. We need more innovators like him on the front line of fighting the disease and finding tools to help those who already have it. Nancy Wurtzel, a frequent blogger for Third Age, is the editor of www.datingdementia.com. Earlier this year, she wrote about the global impact of AlzheimerΓÇÖs for Third Age: http://www.thirdage.com/article/global-alzheimers-crisis-are-you-ready-take-action