Which older patients are competent to drive? : approaches to office-based assessment.

Author(s)
Hogan, D.B.
Year
Abstract

The objective of this study was to review three proposed approaches to office-based assessment of older drivers and to evaluate recommendations made about dementia and driving. The American Medical Association's (AMA's) Physician's Guide to Assessing and Counselling Older Drivers gives recommendations for office-based assessment of older patients' medical fitness to drive. Other approaches examined were those outlined in the sixth edition of Determining Medical Fitness to Drive produced by the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) and SAFE DRIVE. Recommendations for dementia and driving from these documents and other sources were reviewed. All evidence was level III. The AMA document usefully identified ways to detect drivers at risk and key areas for assessment (vision, cognition, motor function). Recommendations on evaluating these areas require validation. The CMA guide and SAFE DRIVE were overly broad in their recommendations. How best to detect cognitive impairment that told affect driving remains unclear. Office-based approaches to identifying older drivers who are either unsafe to drive or require more extensive evaluation need to be validated. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 32075 [electronic version only]
Source

Canadian Family Physician, Vol. 51 (2005), (March), p. 362-368, 27 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.