Medical restrictions to driving: the awareness of patients and doctors
Rosemary Kelly, Timothy Warke, Ian Steele
Department of
Health Care for Elderly People, Royal Victoria Hospital, Grosvenor
Road, Belfast, BT12 6BA, Northern Ireland
Accepted 3 June 1999
The study was set up to investigate the awareness of
elderly patients and medical doctors of medical restrictions to
driving. Separate questionnaires were completed by patients and
doctors. All were interviewed face-to-face, without prior warning and
their immediate answers were recorded. In total, 150 elderly patients from the acute elderly care wards, rehabilitation wards and day hospital, and 50 doctors (including all grades from consultant to
junior house officer) were interviewed. The main outcome measures were
numbers of patients currently driving and previously driving; patients' awareness of how their medical condition affected their ability to drive; doctors' spontaneous knowledge of medical conditions which restrict driving, current licensing policy, and restrictions for
five specific medical conditions (epilepsy, myocardial infarction, stroke, 5-cm abdominal aortic aneurysm, and diabetes). Only 21 patients
were current drivers, and six of these should not have been driving.
While 103 perceived themselves eligible to drive, 46 had medical
restrictions to driving. Seventeen of the 47 patients who perceived
themselves not eligible to drive possibly did not have restrictions to
driving. Doctors' knowledge of the current licensing policy and action
to be taken if a patient was not eligible to drive was very poor.
Knowledge of medical restrictions to driving was scanty, with few
doctors giving the correct driving restrictions for the five specific
conditions. We recommend that education of doctors regarding medical
restrictions to driving should begin at an undergraduate level and be
continued throughout their postgraduate career.
Keywords: driving restrictions; elderly
© 1999 by The Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine
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