Drawing clocks and driving cars : use of brief tests of cognition to screen driving competency in older adults.

Author(s)
Freund, B. Gravenstein, S. Ferris, R. Burke, B.L. & Shaheen, E.
Year
Abstract

The purpose of the prospective cohort study was to determine whether a new method of scoring the Clock Drawing Test (CDT) is a reliable and valid method for identifying older adults with declining driving competence. Setting was an outpatient driving evaluation clinic. Participants were one hundred nineteen community-dwelling, active drivers with a valid driver's license, aged 60 and older referred for driving evaluation. Main outcome measures were the CDT and a driving test using a STISIM Drive simulator. The CDT showed a high level of accuracy in predicting driving simulation outcome (area under the receiver-operator curve, 0.90; 95% confidence interval, 0.82 to 0.95). CDT scoring scales were comparable and all correlations between CDT scores and driving performance were negative, implying that as the CDT score decreases, the number of errors increases. Interrater reliability of CDT scores was 0.95. Subjects scoring less than 5 out of 7 points on the CDT made significantly more driving errors, hazardous and in total (P<.001). The CDT can help establish problems with executive function and indicate the need for a formal driving evaluation. Our CDT scoring scale is a reliable, valid, and time-effective screening tool for identifying elderly drivers in need of further evaluation. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20071575 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of General Internal Medicine, Vol. 20 (2005), No. 3 (March), p. 240-244, 28 ref.

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