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Medical Conditions Associated With Driving Cessation in Community-Dwelling, Ambulatory Elders
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1993
Year
AgingDisabilityTraffic EnforcementEducationInjury PreventionGeriatric MedicineRetinal HemorrhagePreventive MedicineDriver BehaviorLongevityAging-associated DiseasePublic HealthAssistive TechnologyHealth PolicyGeriatricsElderly CareRehabilitationDriving PrivilegesDriver PerformanceCessation RiskMedicineDriving Cessation
The decision to stop driving leads to severe contraction of independence, and most localities do not curtail driving privileges in impaired elders. In a population of community-based, ambulatory individuals 70-96 years old, annual medical screening showed that 276 of 1,656 (16.7 +/- 1.8%) who reported driving regularly in the past do not currently drive. The cessation of driving behavior was examined in terms of specific medical conditions occurring within the past 5 years. Retired drivers were disproportionately female, and driving cessation risk rose with age. Age-sex-adjusted logistic regression found that six conditions explained about 50 percent of the decisions to stop driving: macular degeneration; retinal hemorrhage; any deficit in Activities of Daily Living; Parkinson's disease; stroke-related residual paralysis or weakness; and syncope. Strikingly, only 1.8 percent of those who stopped driving had ever had a license revoked; 58.7 percent reported voluntarily stopping; 31.9 percent gave health or medical reasons. Clearly, the decision to cede driving privileges is complex and not dependent solely on medical problems.