How adult children in the UK and the US view the driving cessation of their parents : is a policy window opening?

Author(s)
Rosenbloom, S.
Year
Abstract

Both the UK and the US have rapidly ageing and increasingly diverse populations very dependent on driving. A comparative study commissioned by the UK Department for Transport found that in both the UK and the US adult children of older drivers, whilst often concerned about their parents’ continued driving, were also worried about the burden they would carry when their parents stopped driving, although there were differences by race and ethnicity. This study suggests that a policy window may be opening through which babyboomers can advocate for a range of driver training, roadway and vehicle improvements, expansion and enhancement of traditional public transportation and community transport options, improvements in accessibility and pedestrian infrastructure, and supportive land use and housing policies that would allow older people to drive safely longer, and, find meaningful mobility options when they can no longer drive. Policy responses must recognise and respond appropriately to differences by race and ethnicity. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20101481 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Transport Geography, Vol. 18 (2010), No. 5 (September), Special issue: The mobility of older people, p. 634-641, 72 ref.

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