Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Today's Edition

EveryNews

Stories that matter, signal over noise

Community

77-year-old woman goes missing in Vorzela — police return her home

A summer resident of Vorzel was unable to find her way home. Police officers identified the woman and took her to her relatives.

Oleg Bazylewicz

By Oleg Bazylewicz

April 8, 2026 · 1 min read

77-year-old woman goes missing in Vorzela — police return her home

In Vorzel, Kyiv region, patrol police officers helped a 77-year-old woman who got lost and could not find her way home on her own.

Law enforcement officers found the elderly resident on the street — she was confused and disoriented. The police officers identified her, contacted her relatives, and brought the woman home safely.

Similar cases are not uncommon. According to Ukrainian geriatricians, spatial disorientation is one of the early symptoms of dementia, which affects between 150,000 to 200,000 people in Ukraine according to various estimates. Most of them live without an official diagnosis and without systematic care — burdening families who are often themselves facing war conditions, evacuation, or loss.

Vorzel is a town that continues to recover from Russian occupation in spring 2022. Some of its residents have returned, others have not. For those who remained or returned, social protection infrastructure is being rebuilt more slowly than housing.

This episode ended well. But it raises a concrete question: do territorial communities that experienced occupation have the resources and protocols for systematic work with vulnerable elderly people — or does each such case still depend on whether an attentive patrol officer happens to be nearby?

Related

Latest

Business

EU Against Google: Why the Latest Fine Could Change More Than Previous Ones

# European Regulators Target Google Again — This Time Over Digital Markets Act Violations. What's Behind the Accusations and Why It Matters Beyond the Corporation European regulators have renewed their scrutiny of Google, this time focusing on alleged violations of the Digital Markets Act. The charges underscore Brussels' increasingly aggressive stance on big tech monopolies and what officials say are anticompetitive practices. The accusations center on how Google leverages its dominance across multiple digital services — from search to advertising to mobile platforms — to disadvantage competitors. Regulators claim the company is using its market power in ways that stifle innovation and limit consumer choice. The case carries significance far beyond Google itself. It signals how the EU is attempting to enforce its landmark Digital Markets Act, legislation designed to curb the gatekeeping power of tech giants. A potential penalty could set precedent for how other large technology companies face similar scrutiny. For consumers and smaller tech firms, the outcome could reshape the digital landscape by creating more room for competition. For Google, fines and operational restrictions could fundamentally alter its business model in Europe, the world's most stringent regulatory market. The case also reflects a broader geopolitical divide, with the EU pursuing a regulatory approach that contrasts sharply with the lighter-touch oversight favored in the United States.

May 26, 2026