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Medicineworld.org: When do older drivers stop driving?
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When do older drivers stop driving?
With 30 million drivers in the US aged 65 and over, we count on older Americans to recognize when they can no longer drive safely and decide that it's time to stay off the road. A newly released study finds that a decrease in vision function is a key factor in bringing about this decision.
The results, recently published in Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, reveal that after a year, 1.5 percent of the drivers had given up driving, and another 3.4 percent had restricted their driving. The most common predictors of stopping or decreasing driving were slow visual scanning, psychomotor speed and poor visuo-constructional skills, as well as reduced contrast sensitivity. (These skills are necessary to help drivers be aware of and respond to other cars, road conditions and road signs. Contrast sensitivity is the ability to detect detail in shades of gray; it is necessary for driving in poor weather and low lighting.) "These skills are important for safe and confident driving where objects are moving at rapid speeds in relation to each other, and timely and accurate judgments are required," the scientists stated. The study, which was in part supported by the National Institute of Aging, also observed that women were four times more likely than men to stop or restrict their driving. In addition, drivers who had higher depression scores on the initial test were more likely to have given up or restricted their driving after a year. Prior studies have examined depression as an effect of giving up driving, not as a predictor. "Older drivers are the fastest growing sector of all licensed drivers in the US," noted researcher Lisa Keay, PhD. "The decision to stop or limit driving to one's own neighborhood has major implications for personal independence - but it is an important way to maintain the safety of older drivers and those who share the road. "As a society, we would like to believe that when a driver recognizes that his or her functions correlation to vision or cognition are declining, they make that crucial decision. My colleagues and I found it reassuring that in this group, that appeared to be the case.". Posted by: Mike Source
Did you know?
With 30 million drivers in the US aged 65 and over, we count on older Americans to recognize when they can no longer drive safely and decide that it's time to stay off the road. A newly released study finds that a decrease in vision function is a key factor in bringing about this decision.
Medicineworld.org: When do older drivers stop driving?
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