2018
DOI: 10.1186/s12877-018-0910-4
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Adherence to driving cessation advice given to patients with cognitive impairment and consequences for mobility

Abstract: BackgroundDriving is related to social participation; therefore older drivers may be reluctant to cease driving. Continuation of driving has also been reported in a large proportion of patients with cognitive impairment. The aim of this study is to investigate whether patients with cognitive impairment adhere to driving cessation advice after a fitness-to-drive assessment and what the consequences are with regard to mobility.MethodsPatients with cognitive impairment (n = 172) participated in a fitness-to-drive… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Healthy older drivers 27 Aging is associated with increasing cognitive, 28 motor, and sensory impairments. These impairments 27,28], avoidance behavior [19,29,30], relatives' reports of unsafe driving [19,31], the number of accidents in the past years [19,27,32], and reduced driving practice [19,33,34]. Moreover, visual impairments [35][36][37][38], impaired cervical spine mobility [20, 39,40], and other indicators of poor physical health status [20, 28,41] were reported to be relevant pre- Table 1 The most robust evidence-based cognitive and non-cognitive predictors of practical driving behavior in healthy older drivers and drivers with MCI nitive and non-cognitive risk factors (Table 1) in a previous study [30].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Healthy older drivers 27 Aging is associated with increasing cognitive, 28 motor, and sensory impairments. These impairments 27,28], avoidance behavior [19,29,30], relatives' reports of unsafe driving [19,31], the number of accidents in the past years [19,27,32], and reduced driving practice [19,33,34]. Moreover, visual impairments [35][36][37][38], impaired cervical spine mobility [20, 39,40], and other indicators of poor physical health status [20, 28,41] were reported to be relevant pre- Table 1 The most robust evidence-based cognitive and non-cognitive predictors of practical driving behavior in healthy older drivers and drivers with MCI nitive and non-cognitive risk factors (Table 1) in a previous study [30].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is in line with previous studies showing that the MMSE was insensitive to the risk of unsafe driving 31 and that the items of the MMSE were relatively less associated with driving ability. 14,32 Currently, there are no specific guidelines regarding aptitude tests for the renewal of driver's license in older drivers in 7 The Korea Road Traffic Authority provides cognitive function tests for the purpose of education of older drivers, but these include only evaluations of attention and visuospatial function, not memory function tests. Since performance on the WLMT, which evaluate learning ability and working memory, was associated with the risk of risky driving in the present study, screening instruments to verify driving fitness may need to include more questions on memory functions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, their results were inconsistent. 13,14 Moreover, the impact of memory decline on driving has been barely studied in the elderly despite the fact that memory decline is one of the representative symptoms in the cognitively impaired older individuals. In addition, their study samples were relatively small, ranging from 50 to 400, and mostly consisted of cognitively impaired elderly.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three primary observational studies compared simulated driving with on-road driving assessment [15,54,84]. All three studies used TRIP scoring system as an outcome measure for the on-road assessment and the following outcome measures for driving simulator assessment: minimum speed when approaching an intersection with traffic lights, number of collisions, the deceleration of the rear car after merging and time headway directly after merging.…”
Section: Comparison Between Simulated Driving and On-road Driving Ass...mentioning
confidence: 99%