The safety of drivers with chronic desease.

Author(s)
Ysander, L.
Year
Abstract

Six hundred and twelve drivers with chronic disease, mainly diabetes, cardiovascular disease, renal disorders, and diseases of the sense organs, were investigated with regard to the frequency of road accidents and serious drivers offences during a 10-year period. Road accidents directly caused by the disease or its treatment occurred in four (0.8 %) cases, all due to hypoglycaemic attacks in insulin- treated diabetics. A comparison was made between the investigation series and a control series identical with regard to number, age, sex and duration of licence-holding. About 50 % of the drivers in each series were asked about their exposure to traffic; this proved to be similar in both series. The percentages of drivers experiencing road existents were 4.1 in the investigation series and 7.7 in the control series. The corresponding figures for road accidents and serious driving offences taking together were 9.8 % and 15.3 %. The conclusion is drawn that any increase risk to road safety constituted by drivers with the specified chronic diseases may be satisfactorily offset by the restrictions applied in Sweden in the granting of licences to these drivers.

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Publication

Library number
2904
Source

British Journal of Industrial Medicine, Vol. 23 (1966), No. 1 (January), p. 28-36.

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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.