Disobedience and driving in patients with epilepsy.

Author(s)
Tatum, W.O. Worley, A.V. & Selenica, M.L.
Year
Abstract

Motor vehicle accidents direct legislators to ensure pubic safety. The authors attempted to characterize and quantify driving risk in patients with seizures (PWS). They delivered 12-question surveys to 287 consecutive PWS at an epilepsy clinic in Florida. Illegal and disobedient driving practices were analysed. Eighty-three of 236 (35.2%) PWS were eligible to drive and 62.3% were ineligible with a seizure in <6months (P<0.001, 95% CI: 0.57-0.70). Among the ineligible responders, 23.8% (35/147) of ineligible responders were illegally driving (14.83% of cohort); 11.86% (28/236) of PWS were disobedient refusing to obey the law, and 8.9% (21/236) of PWS were defiant and knew the law. Sadness (75/236, 31.8%) was the most common reaction to restriction, but disobedient PWS were angry (10/28, 35.7%). Overall, a small number of PWS are disobedient and illegally driving. A targeted approach to high-risk drivers with repeated verbal and supplemental driving information may help avoid unnecessary universal physician reporting for PWS. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20111994 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Epilepsy & Behavior, 2011, November 21 [Epub ahead of print], 6 p., 35 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.