Oct 16, 2017

Aged care resident feared killed by crocodile in Queensland

An elderly aged care resident in Cairns has died from what authorities are suspecting is a crocodile attack.

Anne Cameron was a 79 year old resident at an OzCare facility in Craiglie when she went missing on Tuesday afternoon.

Police believe a crocodile took her when they found some of Anne’s clothes, her walking stick and human remains near the Craiglie Creek bank – which is known to be a crocodile infested area – only two day after she went missing.

Anne had a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease and had moved to Cairns from Canberra to be closer to her family.

The home where she resided was a low-care facility for early-onset dementia patients. Her family said that despite her diagnosis, she was still “fiercely independent”.

The grandmother took regular afternoon walks, but would often get lost according to her family.

“Mum even said to me when we were out for walks if I actually turned the wrong direction I am frightened I would lose my way,” her son Craig Eggins told the ABC.

“We are certain she got disorientated … then she became confused as to which way she was supposed to go.”

“It was getting on to dusk and she had cataracts so that would have made it harder for her as well.”

Despite any challenges she may have faced, she and her family wanted to maintain an active lifestyle that she enjoyed.

“She loved her life up here,” said her son, who says the family are still coming to terms with the shock.

“But we are holding onto the fact that mum would have been glad she was not subjected to the insidious nature of Alzheimer’s,” he said.

“Dying slowly with pieces of her missing every day until she could not remember who she was or who anybody else was.”

“She loved being with us … she loved the facility she was at and that she had the freedom to come and go.”

It is understood that the family had not requested any supervision for her during her regular walks.

Ozcare’s Port Douglas facility manager Daniel Robinson said that they were deeply saddened by the disappearance of a “much-loved resident”.

“Mrs Cameron was not a resident of our special care secure unit,”  they said, as their secure area is home to residents who are placed there under the advice of a medical officer.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with Anne’s family during this time.”

Forensic tests are still to be taken on the human remains found, in order to confirm that they belong to Anne Cameron.

But since no one else was reported missing in the area, it was deemed the “logical conclusion” that they belonged to the missing grandmother.

What do you have to say? Comment, share and like below.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. This is such terribly sad news, but I am heartened by the positive outlook that the family has maintained throughout this ordeal. My thoughts are with you all and your dear mother. May her soul rest in peace.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Gardening improves wellbeing of people living with dementia

  The benefits of gardening and being in nature have long been intuitively understood. More recently, researchers have brought scientific rigour to what many felt instinctively: that being outside and involved in the growing of plants is good for us, both in body and mind. In the New South Wales Hunter Valley, a dementia day... Read More

Dementia: “Get to know the person, the disease is secondary”

Tracey Maxfield writes for HelloCare about her experience working as a nurse caring for people living with dementia. She also writes about her depression, and what led her to eventually write her book, ‘Escaping the Rabbit Hole’. Ever since I was a little girl, I wanted to be a nurse. When I was two yrs. old, I used to bandage my teddy, at... Read More

5 Tips to Help Manage Sundowning Syndrome

What is sundowning? Sundowning a term used widely to describe a range of behaviours that occurs in people with or without dementia that worsen in the late afternoon and evening, or as the sunsets. The behaviours you may observe during this time of the day could be agitation, confusion, anxiety, aggression, increased physical activity that... Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version