Prediction of driving capacity after traumatic brain injury : a systematic review.

Author(s)
Ortoleva, C. Brugger, C. Linden, M. van der & Walder, B.
Year
Abstract

The objective of study was to review the current evidence on predictors for the ability to return to driving after traumatic brain injury. Systematic searches were conducted in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, EMBASE, and CINAHL up to March 1, 2010. Studies were rigorously rated for their methodological content and quality and standardized data were extracted from eligible studies. The authors screened 2341 articles, of which 7 satisfied our inclusion criteria. Five studies were of limited quality because of undefined, unrepresentative samples and/or absence of blinding. Studies mentioned 38 candidate predictors and tested 37. The candidate predictors most frequently mentioned were "selective attention" and "divided attention" in 4/7 studies, and "executive functions" and "processing speed," both in 3/7 studies. No association with driving was observed for 19 candidate predictors. Eighteen candidate predictors from 3 domains were associated with driving capacity: patient and trauma characteristics, neuropsychological assessments, and general assessments; 10 candidate predictors were tested in only one study and 8 in more than one study. The results of associations were contradictory for all but one: time between trauma and driving evaluation. It was concluded that there is no sound basis at present for predicting driving capacity after traumatic brain injury because most studies have methodological limitations. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20111848 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation, 2011, September 2 [Epub ahead of print], 12 p., 107 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.