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Sentry Technologies to Release RFID Tracking Devices

June 24th, 2009

Sentry Technologies will begin selling RFID tracking devices for both child and alzheimer markets, mid 3rd quarter of 2009.  Check back soon for more information.

Alarming Lost Child Statistics

June 24th, 2009

Below are some alarming statistics from the Center to Prevent Lost Children, based out of Boston. http://www.preventinglostchildren.org/

  • Over 2000 U.S. kids get lost every day.1
  • Less than 10% are reported to any authority.2
  • Approximately 100 U.S. kids are stereotypically kidnapped by strangers each year.1
  • 90% of families will experience losing a child in a public place.
    • 20% have lost a child more than once.2
  • 7 out of 10 kids get lost at least once in their lives.2
  • 95% will forever remember the trauma of getting lost.2
  • Parents rank losing a child 5 times more concerning to them than terrorism and 3 times more concerning than abduction.2
  • Kids get lost most often in malls and stores (45%)2
  • 27% of families that visit an amusement park lose a child while they are there.3
  • Only 9% of parents put some form of safe ID on their children.2
  • 76% of parents want to know what to do to prevent a child from getting lost.2

Sources:
1: Source = NISMART2: National Incident Studies of Missing, Abducted, Runaway and Thrownaway Children. U.S. Department of Justice. October 2002.
2: Source = Wander Wear Inc. parent survey, September 2006.
3: Source = IntiMetrix study, 2002.

For the 76% of parents who want to know what to do to prevent their child from getting lost I say look no further than the sentryGPSid personal location device!  It’s the smallest, most intelligent, and most cost effective GPS tracking device and web portal combination on the market today.  With the sentryGPSid you can know before your loved one wanders!

Amber Alert issued for 14-year-old girl

June 21st, 2009
By NewsChannel 36 Staff
NEWS@WCNC.com
Posted: Sunday, Jun. 21, 2009

There’s an Amber Alert this weekend out of Moore County, North Carolina to help find a 14-year-old girl. Southern Pines police are looking for Gabriela Velazquez. Officers say she is 5-feet 4-inches talll and weighs 120 pounds. She has black hair and brown eyes.

Police think 20-year-old Ciro Salina may have taken her from the National Guard Armory. He is described as being 5-feet 6-inches tall and also has black hair and brown eyes.

Police don’t know which direction they could be traveling in. If you see them or recognize their names being used for any purchases, call 9-1-1.

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/breaking/story/792496.html

10 ways to help a family living with Alzheimer’s

June 3rd, 2009

1. Stay in touch – show you care (A card, a call or a visit all mean a lot)
2. Treat the person with respect and dignity (Focus on all that the person can do)
3. Do the little things (Drop off dinner or run an errand)
4. Be specific when offering help (Tackle a task on the family’s To Do List)
5. Educate yourself about Alzheimer’s (Learn about its effects and how to respond)
6. Get the whole family out of the house (Plan an activity like a picnic or dinner at your place; include the person with Alzheimer’s whenever possible)
7. Be a good listener (Support and accept – try not to judge)
8. Encourage the family to stay healthy (Offer ideas for support and respite services)
9. Allow the family some personal time (Fill in as a caregiver, when needed)
10. Keep all family members in mind (From tots to elders, each reacts uniquely)

Remember, if you are caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease, you will need help. It is okay to ask for help!

What A Crazy World We Live In…

June 2nd, 2009

I just read the below article in the local Charlotte newspaper, the Charlotte Observer, and I just can’t imagine the reason a toddler would be wandering the streets by herself at 4:30 in the morning. Better yet, why were her parents not frantic as to where she was unless they were sound asleep and she somehow managed to get outside of the house by herself.  Maybe they need a sentryGPSid to alert them when their daughter wanders from home…

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/597/story/758672.html

Toddler found in Pineville roadway at 4:30 a.m.

By Steve Lyttle
slyttle@charlotteobserver.com

Police say a toddler found wandering in the middle of a busy Pineville roadway early this morning has been reunited with her parents.

The girl, thought to be 2 or 3 years old, was spotted about 4:30 a.m. in the middle of Johnston Road in Pineville.

The girl was found in the 10200 block of Johnston Road, a short distance north of McMullen Creek Parkway. That is north of Pineville-Matthews Road.

Police say the motorist who found the girl took her to a nearby gas station and called police. Charlotte-Mecklenburg police joined with Pineville police to try and determine where the girl lives.

Authorities began calling phone numbers at residences within a half-mile radius of the Johnston Road area. Shortly before 11 a.m., CMPD Officer Robert Fey said police were able to find the girl’s parents.

The girl was not injured, police say.

Happy to finally have our rese…

May 27th, 2009

Happy to finally have our reseller network in Chile starting up!

Happy Memorial Day from Sentry…

May 25th, 2009

Happy Memorial Day from Sentry Technologies. Looking forward to some big releases coming out soon!

Sad News Hits Home in Charlotte

May 14th, 2009

Whether it’s stories like the gentleman below, the boy from Greenville, SC a little over a month ago, or any one of the all too many stories that happen around the U.S. and the world all too often, these are the the things you read and hear about that lay heavy on your heart.  Occurrences like these are the ones we strive to prevent, and wish we could end altogether.

Our hearts go out to the family.

The following article is from our local Charlotte Observer, http://www.charlotteobserver.com/breaking/story/721073.html

Alzheimer’s patient found dead in field

State to investigate how the Alzheimer’s patient left unnoticed from an assisted living center in Mooresville.

By Cleve R. Wootson Jr.
cwootson@charlotteobserver.com

A 91-year-old grandfather was found dead in a Mooresville field Sunday night, eight hours after he wandered away from an assisted living facility.

Several investigations are being conducted, but officials at Summit Place, in Mooresville, said it appears Joseph Clay Johnston, who had the degenerative brain disease Alzheimer’s, walked away during a Mother’s Day event at the facility.

“There were a lot of children and visitors celebrating the day with their grandparents,” said Joseph Mikalajunas, president of Bell Senior Living, who owns and operates Summit Place, in a statement. He said there appeared to be no foul play.

Johnston was last seen alive at Summit Place around 1:45 p.m., a little less than eight hours before he was located in a field on U.S. 21, police said. Summit officials estimated it was about 400 feet from the facility.

Johnston’s family said Tuesday that they want to know how Johnston, who could barely walk and lived in a secure part of the facility, got away without anyone noticing. He’d lived at Summit Place for more than two years.

“I’m at peace with the fact that my dad’s in a better place, but I’m very upset with the circumstances around his death,” said Cynthia Tyler of Aiken, S.C. “My dad should have passed away in his bed, or in that facility. Not in the middle of a field, by himself, alone.”

Tyler said she got a call from her sister Sunday night, asking if she had been up to see their father. Her sister said officials at Summit Place had called, saying a family member had signed Johnston out.

Tyler said that for the family, taking Johnston, who was unsteady on his feet and in advanced stages of Alzheimer’s was, “out of the question. Most of the time, I go see daddy for my benefit and he just wanted to be in the bed all the time and sleep.”

The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services plans to conduct an investigation after police conclude theirs, said Jim Jones, a spokesman for the department, which regulates nursing homes. Jones said inspectors had been inside the facility last week for an annual inspection, but the results were still pending.

He was unsure whether Sunday’s incident would affect the results of that inspection. The facility had no deficiencies or penalties when it was inspected in April 2008.

The death raises the same sort of questions about the safety of residents that came up when Mouy Tang, 46, went missing from a Cleveland County assisted-living home last September.

Tang, who had schizophrenia and other medical issues, was never located. In March, a state advisory panel recommended record fines of $50,000 against Unique Living for violations after an investigation into Tang’s disappearance.

Happy Mother’s Day from sentry…

May 10th, 2009

Happy Mother’s Day from sentryGPSid.
What better way to show a mom you care than to give the piece of mind of knowing where her child is?

Bought a GPS from another vendor, but want a more affordable service plan?

May 8th, 2009

So you already bought your GPS device from another vendor, and now you’ve found out how over priced their service plans are.  This is not an uncommon problem, and sentryGPSid can help.

If you haven’t activated your service through a separate vendor as of yet, we can have your SIM card activated for no charge to you.  You will have access to our webportal and your choice of our affordable tracking plans.

If you have activated your service with another provider, you will first have to cancel your service with them and most likely purchase and activate a new SIM card through sentryGPSid.  We can then activate your GPS device and the service plan of your choice.

No more need to be stuck in an over-priced GPS service plan with less features than what the sentryGPSid web portal provides!