669 results on '"Fitness to drive"'
Search Results
2. Electroencephalographic compatibility with fitness to drive: A nationwide survey among Swiss neurologists.
- Author
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Spöndlin, Leo, Hardmeier, Martin, Sutter, Raoul, Lee, Jong Woo, Rüegg, Stephan, and Fisch, Urs
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BRAIN waves ,EPILEPTIFORM discharges ,TRAFFIC safety ,SEIZURES (Medicine) ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Abstract
Objective: The Swiss guidelines for driving with epilepsy require that electroencephalogram (EEG) findings must be compatible with the fitness to drive (FTD) without specifying any criteria. This nationwide survey investigated how Swiss neurologists implement this requirement in clinical practice. Methods: An online survey, including 19 EEG examples and statements about the compatibility of the EEG with FTD, was distributed to all members of the Swiss Society of Clinical Neurophysiology and all Swiss neurological clinics with residency programs. Descriptive statistics and Fleiss' Kappa for inter‐rater agreement were performed. Results: 102 participants (37% female, 45% <45 years) completed the survey, with 15% primarily working in a specialized epileptology center (EPI), 55% in a hospital setting without epileptological focus (HOS), and 30% in private practice (PP). Most participants of all three groups regarded EEG normal variants as compatible with FTD, while hyperventilation‐induced rhythmic slowing and some pathological patterns (e.g., frontal and temporal intermittent rhythmic delta activity [FIRDA, TIRDA], focal interictal epileptiform discharges [IED], focal seizure) were evaluated more heterogeneously. The EEG inter‐rater agreement for EPI was 0.4; 0.31 for PP; and 0.24 for HOS. No consensus was found for acceptable duration for generalized or focal IEDs. Among all participants, evaluation by an epilepsy center (85%) and reaction‐time testing (67%) were evaluated as the most useful additional examinations. However, reaction‐time testing is rarely or never performed by 58%. Most supported EEG results as part of the FTD assessment and demanded more research (both 82%). Significance: Our survey indicates considerable heterogeneity among Swiss neurologists when evaluating the EEG findings for FTD. Inter‐rater agreement in all three groups was fair, with highest agreement among epileptologists. We noted a discrepancy between the usefulness and actual application of reaction‐time testing. More training and research are warranted to achieve rater‐independent consistency for FTD evaluation. Plain Language Summary: In Switzerland, neurologists must consider the findings from EEG (brain waves) exams to evaluate driving safety in people with epilepsy. We surveyed Swiss neurologists, asking their opinions on this matter. We found that opinions differ among individual doctors, with the highest agreement among epilepsy specialists. We also found that some additional tests, such as reaction‐time testing, are perceived as useful but are rarely performed. The participating neurologists supported considering EEG results for driving fitness assessments but favored more precise guidelines and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Electroencephalographic compatibility with fitness to drive: A nationwide survey among Swiss neurologists
- Author
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Leo Spöndlin, Martin Hardmeier, Raoul Sutter, Jong Woo Lee, Stephan Rüegg, and Urs Fisch
- Subjects
electroencephalography ,evaluation ,fitness to drive ,guidelines ,inter‐rater agreement ,survey ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Objective The Swiss guidelines for driving with epilepsy require that electroencephalogram (EEG) findings must be compatible with the fitness to drive (FTD) without specifying any criteria. This nationwide survey investigated how Swiss neurologists implement this requirement in clinical practice. Methods An online survey, including 19 EEG examples and statements about the compatibility of the EEG with FTD, was distributed to all members of the Swiss Society of Clinical Neurophysiology and all Swiss neurological clinics with residency programs. Descriptive statistics and Fleiss' Kappa for inter‐rater agreement were performed. Results 102 participants (37% female, 45%
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- 2024
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4. Piloting the Coffs Harbour Executive Functioning Screen (CHEFS): An off-road tool to predict fitness to drive.
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Hassmén, Peter, Hindman, Emily, Keiller, Tamara, and Blair, Duncan
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EXECUTIVE function , *FISHER discriminant analysis , *VERBAL behavior testing , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests - Abstract
AbstractMental processes responsible for goal-oriented behavior – executive functioning (EF) – include working memory, flexible thinking, and cognitive control. A reliable and valid assessment of EF can inform appropriate interventions and decisions to drive. We investigated the feasibility and validity of a short, iPad-administered EF screening tool in a non-clinical sample: the Coffs Harbour Executive Functioning Screen (CHEFS). Participants (
N = 55) completed the CHEFS alongside a neuropsychological assessment of EF used to assess fitness to drive. Discriminant function analysis (DFA) showed that the CHEFS correctly classified 87% of participants to normative clinical ranges on the Verbal Fluency Test. The results suggest that CHEFS is a novel, easily administered tool for assessing EF in a non-clinical sample. DFA is an appropriate within-tool analysis to support the widespread administration of a screening tool to determine fitness to drive and classify patient referral needs. Further assessment is required to determine CHEFS reliability and validity with a broader range of participants varying in neuropsychological functioning, age, ethnicity, test experience, and compared to on-road driving performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. Effectiveness of a time to fixate for fitness to drive evaluation in neurological patients.
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Miljković, Nadica and Sodnik, Jaka
- Abstract
We present a method to automatically calculate time to fixate (TTF) from the eye-tracker data in subjects with neurological impairment using a driving simulator. TTF presents the time interval for a person to notice the stimulus from its first occurrence. Precisely, we measured the time since the children started to cross the street until the drivers directed their look to the children. From 108 neurological patients recruited for the study, the analysis of TTF was performed in 56 patients to assess fit-, unfit-, and conditionally-fit-to-drive patients. The results showed that the proposed method based on the YOLO (you only look once) object detector is efficient for computing TTFs from the eye-tracker data. We obtained discriminative results for fit-to-drive patients by application of Tukey's honest significant difference post hoc test (p < 0.01), while no difference was observed between conditionally-fit and unfit-to-drive groups (p = 0.542). Moreover, we show that time-to-collision (TTC), initial gaze distance (IGD) from pedestrians, and speed at the hazard onset did not influence the result, while the only significant interaction is among fitness, IGD, and TTC on TTF. Obtained TTFs are also compared with the perception response times (PRT) calculated independently from eye-tracker data and YOLO. Although we reached statistically significant results that speak in favor of possible method application for assessment of fitness to drive, we provide detailed directions for future driving simulation-based evaluation and propose processing workflow to secure reliable TTF calculation and its possible application in for example psychology and neuroscience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Alcohol use disorder and fitness to drive: Discrepancies between health professionals' evaluations and objective measures of alcohol use and cognitive functioning.
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Høiland, Kristoffer, Arnevik, Espen Kristian Ajo, and Egeland, Jens
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ALCOHOLISM ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,ALCOHOL drinking ,COGNITIVE ability ,MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
Aims: In this study, we investigated if health professionals' evaluations of driving ability corresponded with measures of severity of alcohol use and measures of cognitive functions necessary for safely driving a car. Methods: A total of 90 participants from a multicentre study were included. Participants were categorised into three groups: (1) the group judged fit to drive (FIT); (2) the group judged not fit to drive (UNFIT); and (3) the group who had lost their driver's licence due to legal sanctions (LEGAL). The participants' AUDIT scores, earlier treatment episodes and results from neuropsychological tests of reaction time, attention and visuospatial ability were included in the analyses. Results: We found a significant difference in the severity of alcohol use disorder (AUD) and visuospatial abilities between the FIT and UNFIT groups. Half of the UNFIT group had at least mild visuospatial difficulties, compared to only a quarter in the FIT group. There were no group differences in reaction time or attentional measures. The LEGAL group had more severe AUD than the other groups. Conclusion: The FIT group did not perform differently from the UNFIT group on attention and reaction time measures. The UNFIT group had more visuospatial impairments, but even half of this group had normal scores. It is uncertain whether the differences between the two groups are of practical significance. The quality of health professionals' evaluations may be questioned, and the results highlight the need for more reliable and valid criteria for doing fitness to drive evaluations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Einschränkungen der Mobilität von älteren Verkehrsteilnehmern durch Medikamente, Alkohol und Cannabis.
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Bödefeld, Theresa and Hartung, Benno
- Abstract
Copyright of Bundesgesundheitsblatt - Gesundheitsforschung - Gesundheitsschutz is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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8. Einfluss kardiovaskulärer Erkrankungen auf die Fahreignung: Mobilitätseinschränkungen im Alter.
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Rieß, Jan, Schenker, Niklas, Brunner, Fabian J., and Tönnis, Tobias
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Copyright of Bundesgesundheitsblatt - Gesundheitsforschung - Gesundheitsschutz is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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9. A Systematic Review of Effective Interventions and Strategies to Support the Transition of Older Adults From Driving to Driving Retirement/Cessation.
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Dickerson, Anne E, Stapleton, Tadhg, Bloss, Jamie, Géinas, Isabelle, Harries, Priscilla, Choi, Moon, Margot-Cattin, Isabel, Mazer, Barbara, Patomella, Ann-Helen, Swanepoel, Lizette, Van Niekerk, Lana, Unsworth, Carolyn A, and Vrkljan, Brenda
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META-analysis ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy ,TRANSPORTATION - Published
- 2024
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10. Conversations About Driving Retirement with Older Adults : Target Learner Group: Fourth Year Medical Students in a 6-Year Program
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Brem, Beate G., Bauer, Daniel, Levine, Adam I., Series Editor, DeMaria Jr., Samuel, Series Editor, Smith, Cathy M., editor, Alsaba, Nemat, editor, Sokoloff, Lisa Guttman, editor, and Nestel, Debra, editor
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- 2024
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11. Can Simulated Driving-Based Tasks Reliably Assess Fitness to Drive?
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Pečečnik, Kristina Stojmenova, Medarević, Jelena, Čižman-Štaba, Urša, Rutar, Miha, Sremec, Marko, Sodnik, Jaka, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Trajanović, Miroslav, editor, Filipović, Nenad, editor, and Zdravković, Milan, editor
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- 2024
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12. Skin temperature as a predictor of on‐the‐road driving performance in people with central disorders of hypersomnolence.
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Vael, Veronique E. C., Bijlenga, Denise, Schinkelshoek, Mink S., van der Sluiszen, Nick N. J. J. M., Remmerswaal, Aniek, Overeem, Sebastiaan, Ramaekers, Johannes G., Vermeeren, Annemiek, Lammers, Gert Jan, and Fronczek, Rolf
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SKIN temperature , *DROWSINESS , *TEMPERATURE measurements , *HYPERSOMNIA , *NARCOLEPSY , *STANDARD deviations - Abstract
Summary: Excessive daytime sleepiness is the core symptom of central disorders of hypersomnolence (CDH) and can directly impair driving performance. Sleepiness is reflected in relative alterations in distal and proximal skin temperature. Therefore, we examined the predictive value of skin temperature on driving performance. Distal and proximal skin temperature and their gradient (DPG) were continuously measured in 44 participants with narcolepsy type 1, narcolepsy type 2 or idiopathic hypersomnia during a standardised 1‐h driving test. Driving performance was defined as the standard deviation of lateral position (SDLP) per 5 km segment (equivalent to 3 min of driving). Distal and proximal skin temperature and DPG measurements were averaged over each segment and changes over segments were calculated. Mixed‐effect model analyses showed a strong, quadratic association between proximal skin temperature and SDLP (p < 0.001) and a linear association between DPG and SDLP (p < 0.021). Proximal skin temperature changes over 3 to 15 min were predictive for SDLP. Moreover, SDLP increased over time (0.34 cm/segment, p < 0.001) and was higher in men than in women (3.50 cm, p = 0.012). We conclude that proximal skin temperature is a promising predictor for real‐time assessment of driving performance in people with CDH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Addressing Driving in Acute Care: Perceived Relevance and Competence.
- Author
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Vander Veen, April, Holmes, Jeffrey, Tucker, Patricia, and Alvarez, Liliana
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PROFESSIONS ,SELF-evaluation ,CROSS-sectional method ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy ,AUTOMOBILE driving ,CRITICAL care medicine ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PROFESSIONAL competence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,OCCUPATIONAL therapists - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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14. Doctor, am I allowed to drive? A practical case-based guide on fitness to drive in cardiovascular diseases adapted from the Swiss model
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Achim Alexandru
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fitness to drive ,cardiovascular diseases ,car accident ,sudden death ,driving license ,Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 - Abstract
From 2016 onwards, a group of cardiologists initially formed in 2013 took the initiative to regulate and standardize the rights of European citizens suffering from diverse cardiovascular conditions at the European level. Subsequently, the Romanian government embraced and incorporated these recommendations into law a year later. This process addressed several important new aspects, including stents, myocarditis, and various cardiomyopathies, with a focus on striking a balance between the individual’s right to drive a vehicle and the need to safeguard the lives of others. The Romanian law, however, is vague and states that “candidates or drivers from the indicated groups can be issued or renewed their driving licenses only after the condition in question has been effectively treated and subject to the opinion issued by the specialist cardiology doctor and, depending on a case, by performing a periodic medical check” but does not clearly specify how and for how long and to whom exactly the driver’s license should be suspended. Interestingly, Switzerland, despite not being an EU member, developed its own set of recommendations three years later, drawing strong inspiration from the German guidelines, which in turn personalized its indications (being the European country with the most publications in this field). A refinement of the refinement, one could say. The indications are clear, precise, and structured in a point-by-point fashion. The purpose of this review is to explore the Swiss guidelines on fitness to drive in cardiovascular diseases interactively, with discussions on fictitious cases, in the hope that doctors will be able to become more familiar with these rigid and often interpretable indications and implement them in their daily practice.
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- 2023
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15. Driving into the future: A scoping review of smartwatch use for real-time driver monitoring
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Roza Eleni Barka and Ioannis Politis
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Wrist-wearable device ,Human factor ,Driver monitoring ,Driver behavior ,Physiological measurements ,Fitness to drive ,Transportation and communications ,HE1-9990 - Abstract
The use of smartwatches has increased significantly in recent years for leisure, health, and research purposes. In the transport sector, smartwatches facilitate cost-effective, unintrusive, and dynamic monitoring of the driver’s state and behavior while on the road. This scoping review aimed to analyze and synthesize publications that have collected smartwatch data during driving to examine the driver’s condition, behavior, in-cabin activities, and reactions. The main objective was to assess the extent to which smartwatches have been included in driving-related studies, organize the relevant literature thematically, and identify the issues that arise during the collection and analysis of smartwatch data.A scoping review was conducted and 76 eligible records were identified based on the framework provided by Arksey and O’Malley. The publications differed significantly in terms of their main purposes, number of recruited participants, smartwatches used, and methodologies applied. Five main themes were identified in the relevant literature: driver state assessment, benchmark performance, driver assistance systems and interventions, exogenous and endogenous factors, and detection of driving events. The review confirms the potential of smartwatches as a tool for driver monitoring, which goes beyond the capabilities of questionnaires. Some studies reported data-related problems, mainly related to data loss and sweating. Future research should adopt a more comprehensive approach to driver monitoring by expanding the collection of data beyond the narrow context of the driving task to include measurements related to the long-term health of the driver, such as sleep, resting heart rate, and physical activity.
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- 2024
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16. Validation of a computerized driving simulator test of cognitive abilities for fitness-to-drive assessments.
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Gårdinger, Max Bremberg, Johansson, Robert, Lidestam, Björn, and Selander, Helena
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COGNITIVE Abilities Test ,AUTOMOBILE driving simulators ,TRAIL Making Test ,COGNITIVE testing ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,COMPUTER adaptive testing ,REACTION time - Abstract
Background: Driving requires a series of cognitive abilities, many of which are affected by age and medical conditions. The psychosocial importance of continued driving ushers the need for valid measurements in fitness-to-drive assessments. A driving simulator test could prove useful in these assessments, having greater face validity than other off-road tests and being more costeffective and safer than ordinary on-road testing. The aim of this study was to validate a driving simulator test for assessment of cognitive ability in fitness-todrive assessments. Methods: The study included 67 healthy participants. Internal consistency of the simulator subtests was estimated. A correlation analysis between results on the simulator and the cognitive tests Trail Making Test (TMT) A and B and the Useful field of View test (UFOV) and multiple regression analysis were conducted. Finally, a comparison of results between age groups (>65 years) and (<65 years) was done. Results: Results showed good internal consistency. Significant and moderate correlations were found for all reaction time in the simulator's subtests and UFOV 3, and all but two with TMT A. Lane positioning in the simulator showed significant and low to moderate correlations with UFOV 3 in all subtests. Reaction time and Double reaction time on subtest 3 were significantly correlated with UFOV 2 and UFOV 3 and TMT A, respectively. Test on Centerline (position) in subtest 3 as dependent variable was significantly correlated with UFOV 3. Significant means differences and large effect sizes between the age groups were found for all reaction time and lane positioning tests. Conclusion: The findings of concurrent validity, especially with TMT A and UFOV 3 and its sensitivity for age-related differences, indicate potential for the simulator to be used as a complement in fitness-to-drive assessments. However, a clinical study is necessary to further examine its usefulness for patients with cognitive deficits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. The Impact of Age, Sex, and Position on Visual-Motor Processing Speed and Reaction Time as Measured by the Vision CoachTM.
- Author
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Dickerson, Anne, Gartz Taylor, Rachel, Register, Joshua, and Miller, Megan
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- *
HUMAN research subjects , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *AGE distribution , *CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOLOGY of movement , *TASK performance , *SEX distribution , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *T-test (Statistics) , *AUTOMOBILE driving , *VISUAL perception , *BODY movement , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *FACTOR analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *REACTION time , *DATA analysis software , *MOTOR ability - Abstract
Occupational therapists are in a unique position to screen and evaluate fitness to drive with both visual-motor processing speed and reaction time being important factors to consider when determining fitness to drive. This study uses the Vision CoachTM to investigate the differences in visual-motor processing speed and reaction time across age and sex of healthy adults. It also explores whether the position of sitting or standing made any difference. The results showed no difference between male/female or standing/sitting positions. However, there was a statistically significant difference between age groups, with older adults demonstrating slower visual-motor processing speed and reaction times. These findings can be used for future studies to explore the impact of injury or disease on visual-motor processing speed and reaction times and its relation to fitness to drive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. The Impact of Age, Sex, and Position on Visual-Motor Processing Speed and Reaction Time as Measured by the Vision CoachTM.
- Author
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Dickerson, Anne, Gartz Taylor, Rachel, Register, Joshua, and Miller, Megan
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HUMAN research subjects ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,AGE distribution ,CROSS-sectional method ,PSYCHOLOGY of movement ,TASK performance ,SEX distribution ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,T-test (Statistics) ,AUTOMOBILE driving ,VISUAL perception ,BODY movement ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,FACTOR analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,REACTION time ,DATA analysis software ,MOTOR ability - Abstract
Occupational therapists are in a unique position to screen and evaluate fitness to drive with both visual-motor processing speed and reaction time being important factors to consider when determining fitness to drive. This study uses the Vision Coach
TM to investigate the differences in visual-motor processing speed and reaction time across age and sex of healthy adults. It also explores whether the position of sitting or standing made any difference. The results showed no difference between male/female or standing/sitting positions. However, there was a statistically significant difference between age groups, with older adults demonstrating slower visual-motor processing speed and reaction times. These findings can be used for future studies to explore the impact of injury or disease on visual-motor processing speed and reaction times and its relation to fitness to drive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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19. Validation of a computerized driving simulator test of cognitive abilities for fitness-to-drive assessments
- Author
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Max Bremberg Gårdinger, Robert Johansson, Björn Lidestam, and Helena Selander
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cognition ,driving assessment ,simulator ,off-road test ,attention ,fitness to drive ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
BackgroundDriving requires a series of cognitive abilities, many of which are affected by age and medical conditions. The psychosocial importance of continued driving ushers the need for valid measurements in fitness-to-drive assessments. A driving simulator test could prove useful in these assessments, having greater face validity than other off-road tests and being more cost-effective and safer than ordinary on-road testing. The aim of this study was to validate a driving simulator test for assessment of cognitive ability in fitness-to-drive assessments.MethodsThe study included 67 healthy participants. Internal consistency of the simulator subtests was estimated. A correlation analysis between results on the simulator and the cognitive tests Trail Making Test (TMT) A and B and the Useful field of View test (UFOV) and multiple regression analysis were conducted. Finally, a comparison of results between age groups (>65 years) and (
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- 2024
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20. Fahrtauglichkeit unter Schmerzmedikamenten.
- Author
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Middeldorf, Stefan
- Subjects
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TRAFFIC safety , *AUTOMOBILE drivers' tests , *SAFETY , *ANALGESICS , *PHYSICAL fitness , *PSYCHOLOGY of movement , *AUTOMOBILE driving , *DRUGS , *DRUG utilization - Abstract
Paragraph 2 of the Driving License Ordinance (FeV) defines the relevant share of responsibility for every vehicle driver: Those who cannot move safely in traffic and pose a risk to themselves or others must refrain from driving a motor vehicle. The taking of medication should not be assessed differently from symptoms caused by a severe flu-like infection or gastrointestinal disorder. The assessment of drivers who have been treated with painkillers on a long-term basis with regard to their ability to safely participate in road traffic is complex and, including fundamental considerations, generally also requires a case-by-case approach and, if necessary, an assessment. The typical undesirable effects of most pain medication, especially WHO II and III, can potentially and usually only temporarily put this fitness to drive into question. On the other hand, taking painkillers can make driving possible in the first place. The ability to drive can be impaired in particular when dosing, changing substances, changing doses, supplementing co-medication and also discontinuing substances. A period of 2 weeks for not driving a motor vehicle can be considered useful here. The requirement for safety is to be set even higher for driving license group 2, professional drivers, bus drivers, passenger transport. In this context, road users are required to have a high level of character aptitude. There are trend-setting publications penned by the assessment criteria working group of the German Society for Traffic Psychology (DGVP). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Verkehrstauglichkeit beim Glaukom.
- Author
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Rohrschneider, K. and Tost, F.
- Abstract
Copyright of Die Ophthalmologie is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Improving validity of the trail making test with alphabet support.
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Waggestad, Therese Händel, Kirsebom, Bjørn Eivind, Strobel, Carsten, Wallin, Anders, Eckerström, Marie, Fladby, Tormod, and Egeland, Jens
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MULTIPLE regression analysis ,TRAIL Making Test ,TEST validity ,COGNITION disorders - Abstract
Objective: The Trail Making Test (TMT) is commonly used worldwide to evaluate cognitive decline and car driving ability. However, it has received critique for its dependence on the Latin alphabet and thus, the risk of misclassifying some participants. Alphabet support potentially increases test validity by avoiding misclassification of executive dysfunction in participants with dyslexia and those with insufficient automatization of the Latin alphabet. However, Alphabet support might render the test less sensitive to set-shifting, thus compromising the validity of the test. This study compares two versions of the TMT: with and without alphabet support. Methods: We compared the TMT-A, TMT-B, and TMT-B:A ratios in two independent normative samples with (n = 220) and without (n = 64) alphabet support using multiple regression analysis adjusted for age and education. The sample comprised Scandinavians aged 70-84 years. Alphabet support was included by adding the Latin alphabet A-L on top of the page on the TMT-B. We hypothesized that alphabet support would not change the TMT-B:A ratio. Results: After adjusting for age and years of education, there were no significant differences between the two samples in the TMT-A, TMT-B, or the ratio score (TMT-B:A). Conclusion: Our results suggest that the inclusion of alphabet support does not alter TMT's ability to measure set-shifting in a sample of older Scandinavian adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Do drivers need spiritual fitness? The mediating effect of spiritual fitness on the relationship between personality traits and risky driving behaviours.
- Author
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Mamcarz, Piotr
- Subjects
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TRAFFIC safety , *MOTOR vehicle driving , *PERSONALITY , *SPIRITUALITY , *TRAFFIC fatalities , *RISK-taking behavior - Abstract
• Spiritual fitness is a relevant resilience factor applicable to civilian drivers. • Spiritual fitness was a predictor of risky driving behaviours. • Driver's spiritual fitness was mediator between personality traits (impulsiveness, empathy, and conscientiousness) and risky driving behaviours. • Cross-cultural research should assess spiritual fitness from a broader perspective. • It is worth designing a spiritual fitness-based intervention to reduce risky driving behaviors and enhance empathy and conscientiousness among civilian drivers. Drivers' risky behaviours continue to be a major cause of traffic fatalities. Cultural changes, including fast-paced lifestyles, considerably contribute to speeding, fatigue, and texting while driving. Investigating the causes of these behaviours and resilience factors that can prevent or reduce negative outcomes is vital. The construct of spiritual fitness— defined as 'the ability to adhere to beliefs, principles, or values needed to persevere and prevail in accomplishing a mission'—is an interesting proposition developed by the U.S. Army. Intervention programmes related to spiritual fitness are effective for vehicle operators' performance optimisation. Thus, this study introduces this phenomenon into research on civilian drivers. Specifically, the relationships between spiritual fitness, personality traits, and risky driving behaviours were examined. The study group comprised civilian drivers (N = 1037; M age = 39.48 ± 13.32 years) who completed online self-reported questionnaire. Results showed that spiritual fitness was related to personality traits and risky driving behaviours. Additionally, spiritual fitness was a predictor of risky driving behaviours. Finally, spiritual fitness mediated the relationship between personality traits (impulsiveness, empathy, and conscientiousness) and risky behaviours. These findings confirm that spiritual fitness is a relevant resilience factor that merits further investigation on how it affects the on-road performance of civilian drivers. Study limitations and other possible research avenues are outlined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Analysis of Part 1 of the latest Austroads Guidelines, June 2022.
- Author
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Beran, Roy G. and Devereux, John A.
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OCCUPATIONAL roles , *PROFESSIONAL licenses , *PHYSICAL fitness , *LEGAL liability , *MEDICAL protocols , *AUTOMOBILE driving , *DISABILITY laws - Abstract
The Austroads Fitness to Drive Guidelines were updated in 2022. Most of the focus to date has been on Part 2 of the Guidelines, which provide guidance as to specific medical conditions. Less attention has been paid to Part 1 of the Guidelines, which cover a medical practitioner's ethical and legal obligations. This paper addresses the imbalance by considering and amplifying the obligations discussed in Part 1 of the Guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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25. Adaptation of a European categorization system for driving-impairing medicines in Iran.
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Harzand Jadidi, Sepideh, Farahbakhsh, Mostafa, Sadeghi-Bazargani, Homayoun, and Pourasghar, Faramarz
- Subjects
MEDICAL personnel ,DRUNK driving ,DRUGGED driving - Abstract
Road traffic crashes due to impaired driving are a leading cause of preventable injuries and deaths. The purpose of this study was adaptation of a European categorization system for driving-impairing medicines in Iran. DRUID categorization system was used as a leading model to classify medicines. Medicines that were compatible with DRUID categorization system were identified and classified accordingly. Medicines that were not compatible with DRUID categorization system were assessed in an expert panel in terms of possiblity of classification. Instructions for health care providers and advice for patients were prepared based on the medicine's influence on fitness to drive. Of the 1255 medicines in Iranian pharmacopeia, 488 medicines were classified in four categories. Among classified medicines 43.85% and 25.41% belonged to Category 0 and Category 1. About 13.94%, 10.04%, and 6.76% pertained to Category 2, Category 3, and Multiple categories respectively. Majority of the medicines with moderate and severe adverse influences on driving fitness belonged to the nervous system medicines (72.65%). Most of the medicines with non-existing or minor adverse influences on driving fitness pertained to cardiovascular medicines (16.56%). Majority of uncategorized medicines belonged to Iranian herbal medicines. The current study disclosed that DRUID categorization system was implementable for most of the commonly prescribed medicines. Experimental studies are needed to determine the influence of uncategorized medicines of Iranian pharmacopeia. Other countries with similar settings can adapt DRUID categorization system until they develop their own model using original studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Blood alcohol concentration, drinking history, and sociodemographic factors predicting alcohol use disorder among 'hard core' offenders in Germany
- Author
-
Thomas Wagner, Don DeVol, Bettina Schützhofer, and Ilka Rethfeldt
- Subjects
blood alcohol concentration ,impaired driving ,fitness to drive ,dui offenders ,driver assessment ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 ,Transportation and communications ,HE1-9990 - Abstract
Driving under the influence of alcohol is one of the greatest dangers to the safety of road users not only in Germany, but across the rest of the world. An essential indicator for both punitive and corrective measures as well as for the prediction of recidivism is the blood alcohol concentration (BAC). This paper examines the relationships between BAC of first-time offenders, former drinking history, traffic related alcohol problem (TRAP), and the outcome of a medical-psychological assessment. The concept of TRAP combines syndromes from Alcohol Use Disorders (AUD) and a non-clinical delinquency category (drink and drive issue without AUD). It is in use for diagnostics among "hard core" alcohol-impaired offenders according to a diagnostic model which is applied in Germany and accepted by the legislator. The present study (N = 505) showed that a BAC of 0.11% upwards must be considered as a risk parameter for the identification of drivers with non-normative, and therefore traffic safety impairing drinking patterns. The importance of BAC as a risk indicator for road safety is underlined by significant correlations between BAC with drinking history and TRAP, but its prognostic value is poor, since BAC was unrelated to the outcome of the medical-psychological assessment. It could be demonstrated that TRAP severity increases with higher age, higher BAC, greater number of drinking days, higher occasion-related drinking amounts, and non-social drinking motivation (against stress and tension). Practical consequences are drawn regarding preconditions for re-issuing a driving licence.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Strong evidence for age as the single most dominant predictor of medically supervised driving test—mini mental status test outcomes provide only weak but significant moderate additional predictive value
- Author
-
Yannik Isler, Simon Schwab, Regula Wick, and Stefan Lakämper
- Subjects
Fitness to drive ,Traffic medicine ,Elderly drivers ,Cognitive testing ,Medically supervised driving test ,Mini mental status test ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Background With age, medical conditions impairing safe driving accumulate. Consequently, the risk of accidents increases. To mitigate this risk, Swiss law requires biannual assessments of the fitness to drive of elderly drivers. Drivers may prove their cognitive and physical capacity for safe driving in a medically supervised driving test (MSDT) when borderline cases, as indicated by low performance in a set of four cognitive tests, including e.g. the mini mental status test (MMST). Any prognostic, rather than indicative, relations for MSDT outcomes have neither been confirmed nor falsified so far. In order to avoid use of unsubstantiated rules of thumb, we here evaluate the predictive value for MSDT outcomes of the outcomes of the standard set of four cognitive tests, used in Swiss traffic medicine examinations. Methods We present descriptive information on age, gender and cognitive pretesting results of all MSDTs recorded in our case database from 2017 to 2019. Based on these retrospective cohort data, we used logistic regression to predict the binary outcome MSDT. An exploratory analysis used all available data (model 1). Based on the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), we then established a model including variables age and MMST (model 2). To evaluate the predictive value of the four cognitive assessments, model 3 included cognitive test outcomes only. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) and area under the curve (AUC) allowed evaluating discriminative performance of the three different models using independent validation data. Results Using N = 188 complete data sets of a total of 225 included cases, AIC identified age (p
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Metabolomics-based Sleepiness Markers for Risk Prevention and Traffic Safety (ME-SMART): a monocentric, controlled, randomized, crossover trial.
- Author
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Scholz, Michael, Lakaemper, Stefan, Keller, Kristina, Dobay, Akos, Steuer, Andrea Eva, Landolt, Hans-Peter, and Kraemer, Thomas
- Subjects
- *
SLEEP-wake cycle , *DROWSINESS , *TRAFFIC safety , *CROSSOVER trials , *DRUG abuse , *SLEEP deprivation , *SALIVA - Abstract
Background: Too little sleep and the consequences thereof are a heavy burden in modern societies. In contrast to alcohol or illicit drug use, there are no quick roadside or workplace tests for objective biomarkers for sleepiness. We hypothesize that changes in physiological functions (such as sleep–wake regulation) are reflected in changes of endogenous metabolism and should therefore be detectable as a change in metabolic profiles. This study will allow for creating a reliable and objective panel of candidate biomarkers being indicative for sleepiness and its behavioral outcomes. Methods: This is a monocentric, controlled, randomized, crossover, clinical study to detect potential biomarkers. Each of the anticipated 24 participants will be allocated in randomized order to each of the three study arms (control, sleep restriction, and sleep deprivation). These only differ in the amount of hours slept per night. In the control condition, participants will adhere to a 16/8 h wake/sleep regime. In both sleep restriction and sleep deprivation conditions, participants will accumulate a total sleep deficit of 8 h, achieved by different wake/sleep regimes that simulate real-life scenarios. The primary outcome is changes in the metabolic profile (i.e., metabolome) in oral fluid. Secondary outcome measures will include driving performance, psychomotor vigilance test, d2 Test of Attention, visual attention test, subjective (situational) sleepiness, electroencephalographic changes, behavioral markers of sleepiness, changes in metabolite concentrations in exhaled breath and finger sweat, and correlation of metabolic changes among biological matrices. Discussion: This is the first trial of its kind that investigates complete metabolic profiles combined with performance monitoring in humans over a multi-day period involving different sleep–wake schedules. Hereby, we aim to establish a candidate biomarker panel being indicative for sleepiness and its behavioral outcomes. To date, there are no robust and easily accessible biomarkers for the detection of sleepiness, even though the vast damage on society is well known. Thus, our findings will be of high value for many related disciplines. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT05585515, released on 18.10.2022; Swiss National Clinical Trial Portal SNCTP000005089, registered on 12 August 2022. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Fitness to Drive: It is Time for Evidence-Based Consensus and Italian Guidelines for Medical Driving Assessment.
- Author
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Chirico, Francesco, Ciprani, Alessandro, Garbarino, Sergio, Oggionni, Gianluigi, and Magnavita, Nicola
- Subjects
- *
AUTOMOBILE driving laws , *CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *MEDICAL protocols , *PRIMARY health care , *PHYSICAL fitness , *SLEEP apnea syndromes , *PROFESSIONAL licenses , *AUTOMOBILE drivers' tests , *EVIDENCE-based medicine - Abstract
European Union (EU) and non-EU countries have adopted different medical procedures for the issuance and renewal of a driver's license showing relevant matters of concern. In Europe, EU directives have been only partially supplemented with national laws, and there is a paucity of evidence-based criteria and methods for fitness-to-drive assessment. For instance, there is no agreement on standards for establishing which is the competent authority charged with the medical examination. Furthermore, license conditions, restrictions, or vehicle modifications, which appear as "limited use" codes on the driver's license are not regulated. This may generate confusion and deformity when it comes to the medico-legal evaluation, with potential ethical implications due to lack of transparency and equity and legal disputes between citizens and competent authorities. In this article, Italian experts on fitness-to-drive medical assessment highlight some major issues concerning the medical driving assessment activity in the EU. The Italian experience is shown as a case study, which is representative of other EU member states, for launching a call for evidence-based consensus documents and scientific guidelines on this topic, which may be helpful to international regulators and medico-legal stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Legal Capacity in the Civil Legal Lives of Persons with Dementia in Taiwan: Implications of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
- Author
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Wu, Kevin Chien-Chang, Dubljević, Veljko, Series Editor, Jotterand, Fabrice, Series Editor, Jox, Ralf J., Series Editor, Racine, Eric, Series Editor, and Bottenberg, Frances, editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Two-Level Complex of Traffic Behavior Assessment Focused on Driving Skills in the Context of Autonomous Driving
- Author
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Havlíčková, Darina, Zámečník, Petr, Šimeček, Michal, Klečková, Sára, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Pal, Nikhil R., Advisory Editor, Bello Perez, Rafael, Advisory Editor, Corchado, Emilio S., Advisory Editor, Hagras, Hani, Advisory Editor, Kóczy, László T., Advisory Editor, Kreinovich, Vladik, Advisory Editor, Lin, Chin-Teng, Advisory Editor, Lu, Jie, Advisory Editor, Melin, Patricia, Advisory Editor, Nedjah, Nadia, Advisory Editor, Nguyen, Ngoc Thanh, Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Cassenti, Daniel N, editor, Scataglini, Sofia, editor, Rajulu, Sudhakar L., editor, and Wright, Julia L., editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The role of personality assessment in forensic driving license renewal procedures. A study supported by the MMPI-2 test.
- Author
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Grattagliano, I., Massaro, Y., Lisi, A., Di Conza, A., Tinella, L., Caffò, A. O., Lopez, A., Catanesi, R., Nardulli, F., and Bosco, A.
- Subjects
PERSONALITY assessment ,AUTOMOBILE driving ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHODIAGNOSTICS ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The main function of the medical-psychological assessment to evaluate fitness to drive (FTD) is to safeguard the community against risks posed by drivers who, owing to psycho-physical disease, personality disturbances, abuse of psychotropic substances or drugs, can be a hazard to safety on the roads. In the context of psychodiagnostic investigations, the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory 2 (MMPI-2) test is the gold standard tool supporting clinical assessments conducted to evaluate a subject's capacity to predict her/his own actions, attitudes, risk propensity, level of conformity to social norms. Other important features of the tool include the specific scales aimed at individuating behaviors adopted with the intent to elude or hide existing personality problems. These behaviors are very frequent in the field of medicolegal, psychological and psychiatric assessments, including FTD evaluations. In this study, the MMPI 2 test was administered to 154 subjects for whom Driving Licence (DL) Medical Commissions based in the south of Italy had required specific personality assessments, compared to a control group of 186 subjects with no clinical or psychodiagnostic problems. The question posed in our study was to understand whether the test was able to detect differences between the personalities of the subjects belonging to the two groups. The results obtained demonstrated significant differences between the experimental group and the controls, shown by the MMPI-2 variables, in particular the clinical Hs scale, the supplementary scales: GF, Re, AAS, APS and the content scales DEP and TRT, as well as the PSY-5 Disc and Nege scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Assessing and Improving Fitness to Drive in the Elderly People: A Scoping Review of Policies and Guidelines
- Author
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Salar Mohammaddokht, Mohammad Saadati, Babak Kashefimehr, and Saber Azami-Aghdash
- Subjects
Assessment ,Elderly ,Prevention ,Fitness to drive ,Road traffic injuries ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: This study has been conducted to analyze the processes, models, and policies to assess fitness to drive and improving driving in the elderly in the world. Methods: The Arkesy and O’Malley frameworks were employed. Articles with at least one aspect of driving eligibility in the elderly were included. Expected data were collected using appropriate keywords from PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, Embase, IranDoc, SID, and MagIran. Data were analyzed using the Content Analysis method. Results: Out of 675 records, 24 papers and reports were included in the study that all of them were High-Income Countries (HICs). Among the studies that referred to the baseline age, the highest frequency was 70 yr old (4 studies). Vision assessment was the main item to judge driving fitness (mentioned in 75% of the studies). The in-person (5 studies) was the most common method of renewal. General practitioners were the principal performers to measure driving fitness (7 studies). Thirteen studies referred to the road tests as part of the driver's license renewal process. In most all reports and papers, there were policies on empowering the elderly driver, including providing safe driving tips, optional driving skills tests, holding retraining courses, etc. The most frequently supporting policies included introducing alternative transportation. Conclusion: Most HICs have worthwhile experience in measuring and improving the fitness to drive in the elderly and enforce different laws according to social and political conditions. Utilizing these experiences by considering economic and social differences can be useful and practical for middle and low-income countries.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Advancing a ‘Human Factors & Ethics Canvas’ for New Driver Assistance Technologies Targeted at Older Adults
- Author
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Cahill, Joan, Crowley, Katie, Cromie, Sam, Doyle, Ciaran, Kenny, Eamonn, Kay, Alison, Gormley, Michael, Hermann, Sonja, Hever, Ann, Ross, Robert, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, and Duffy, Vincent G., editor
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Comparing objective wakefulness and vigilance tests to on‐the‐road driving performance in narcolepsy and idiopathic hypersomnia.
- Author
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Bijlenga, Denise, Urbanus, Bram, van der Sluiszen, Nick N. J. J. M., Overeem, Sebastiaan, Ramaekers, Jan G., Vermeeren, Annemiek, and Lammers, Gert Jan
- Subjects
- *
NARCOLEPSY , *HYPERSOMNIA , *DROWSINESS , *TRAFFIC accidents , *MOTOR ability testing , *STANDARD deviations - Abstract
Summary: Patients with narcolepsy or idiopathic hypersomnia (IH) are at increased risk of driving accidents. Both excessive daytime sleepiness, i.e. unwanted sleep episodes during the day, and disturbed vigilance are core features of these disorders. We tested on‐the‐road driving performance of patients with narcolepsy or IH coming in for a routine driving fitness evaluation and examined: (1) correlations between driving performance and the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test (MWT), Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) and Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT) as objective tests; (2) the predictive power of the MWT and SART for increased risk of impaired driving; (3) the best set of objective predictors for increased risk of impaired driving. Participants were 44 patients (aged 18–75 years) with narcolepsy type 1 (NT1), type 2 (NT2) or IH. They completed the MWT, SART, PVT, a subjective sleepiness questionnaire, and a standardised on‐the‐road driving test. The standard deviation of the lateral position (SDLP) was used as outcome measure of driving performance. The MWT had low correlation with the SDLP (ρ = −0.41 to −0.49, p < 0.01). The SART and PVT had low correlations with SDLP (ρ = 0.30 and ρ = 0.39, respectively, both p < 0.05). The predictive power of MWT for an increased risk of impaired driving was significant, but low (area under the curve = 0.273, p = 0.012), and non‐significant for SART. We conclude that in our present group, none of the tests had adequate ability to predict impaired driving, questioning their use for clinical driving fitness evaluation in narcolepsy and IH. Real‐time monitoring of sleepiness while driving seems more promising in these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. On the Assessment of Fitness to Drive: Steering and Brake Operative Forces
- Author
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Juan F. Dols, Vicent Girbes-Juan, and Inigo Jimenez
- Subjects
Braking forces ,driving assessment ,fitness to drive ,steering operative forces ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
The Directive (EU) 2015/653 aimed at facilitating that the maximum force that any disabled driver could make on the vehicle’s primary controls could be adjusted to their needs. The technical adjustment in the vehicle’s design requires a measurement of the operational forces applied by the driver on the steering and brake controls, in order to determine its functional capacity during the execution of driving manoeuvres. The objective of this paper is to define the steering and braking operative forces used for driving current-market M1 motor vehicles for the fitness to drive assessment of drivers with physical disabilities. A total of 200 trials were performed with 17 different vehicles and 26 drivers. The results obtained help to define a new threshold’s criteria for operative forces onto the steering and braking systems for adapting motor vehicles to disabled drivers. The main contribution of this paper consist on a new technical recommendations about the use of code 20.07 -braking- and 40.01 -steering- to be used in the fitness to drive assessment of driver with disabilities according to Directive (EU) 2015/653 requirements.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Blood alcohol concentration, drinking history, and sociodemographic factors predicting alcohol use disorder among "hard core" offenders in Germany.
- Author
-
WAGNER, THOMAS, DEVOLb, DON, SCHÜTZHOFER, BETTINA, and RETHFELDT, ILKA
- Subjects
BLOOD alcohol ,ALCOHOL drinking ,ALCOHOLISM ,RECIDIVISM - Abstract
Driving under the influence of alcohol is one of the greatest dangers to the safety of road users not only in Germany, but across the rest of the world. An essential indicator for both punitive and corrective measures as well as for the prediction of recidivism is the blood alcohol concentration (BAC). This paper examines the relationships between BAC of first-time offenders, former drinking history, traffic related alcohol problem (TRAP), and the outcome of a medical-psychological assessment. The concept of TRAP combines syndromes from Alcohol Use Disorders (AUD) and a non-clinical delinquency category (drink and drive issue without AUD). It is in use for diagnostics among "hard core" alcohol-impaired offenders according to a diagnostic model which is applied in Germany and accepted by the legislator. The present study (N = 505) showed that a BAC of 0.11% upwards must be considered as a risk parameter for the identification of drivers with non-normative, and therefore traffic safety impairing drinking patterns. The importance of BAC as a risk indicator for road safety is underlined by significant correlations between BAC with drinking history and TRAP, but its prognostic value is poor, since BAC was unrelated to the outcome of the medical-psychological assessment. It could be demonstrated that TRAP severity increases with higher age, higher BAC, greater number of drinking days, higher occasion-related drinking amounts, and non-social drinking motivation (against stress and tension). Practical consequences are drawn regarding preconditions for re-issuing a driving licence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Driving ability in patients with dizziness: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Uwents, Marie-Hélène, Jorissen, Cathérine, Van Ombergen, Angelique, Dobbels, Bieke, van de Berg, Raymond, Janssens de Varebeke, Sebastien, Lammers, Marc, Ross, Veerle, Vanderveken, Olivier, Brijs, Tom, and Van Rompaey, Vincent
- Subjects
- *
MOTOR vehicle driving , *DIZZINESS , *DATA extraction , *TRAFFIC accidents , *AUTOMOBILE driving - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this systematic review was to identify and evaluate studies dealing with driving performance of dizzy patients or patients with a vestibular disorder. Methods: A systematic review was performed according to the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analysis guidelines. (1) PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane library. (2) Study selection: articles about driving ability and reported driving difficulties in patients with dizziness, or a diagnosed vestibular disorder, were included. (3) Data extraction was performed by two independent authors using predefined data fields: patient's characteristics, diagnostic criteria, sample size, and type of evaluation of driving ability and outcome of the study. Results: Eight out of 705 articles matched the inclusion criteria but varied widely regarding the study population, study design, and outcome measures. The majority of studies reported a negative impact of dizziness and/or vestibular disorders on self-reported driving ability and car accidents. Yet several studies could not identify any impairment of driving ability. Conclusions: Driving ability was negatively affected by dizziness or a vestibular disorder in the majority of included studies with low risk of bias. This systematic review revealed a significant heterogeneity in studies reporting driving performance and contradictory results. We were, therefore, unable to identify a causal relationship between dizziness and driving ability. There is a need for prospective studies in populations with different vestibular disorders using subjective and objective outcome measures that have been validated to evaluate driving performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Strong evidence for age as the single most dominant predictor of medically supervised driving test-mini mental status test outcomes provide only weak but significant moderate additional predictive value.
- Author
-
Isler, Yannik, Schwab, Simon, Wick, Regula, and Lakämper, Stefan
- Subjects
COGNITIVE testing ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,TRAFFIC safety ,AKAIKE information criterion ,MEDICAL education examinations - Abstract
Background: With age, medical conditions impairing safe driving accumulate. Consequently, the risk of accidents increases. To mitigate this risk, Swiss law requires biannual assessments of the fitness to drive of elderly drivers. Drivers may prove their cognitive and physical capacity for safe driving in a medically supervised driving test (MSDT) when borderline cases, as indicated by low performance in a set of four cognitive tests, including e.g. the mini mental status test (MMST). Any prognostic, rather than indicative, relations for MSDT outcomes have neither been confirmed nor falsified so far. In order to avoid use of unsubstantiated rules of thumb, we here evaluate the predictive value for MSDT outcomes of the outcomes of the standard set of four cognitive tests, used in Swiss traffic medicine examinations.Methods: We present descriptive information on age, gender and cognitive pretesting results of all MSDTs recorded in our case database from 2017 to 2019. Based on these retrospective cohort data, we used logistic regression to predict the binary outcome MSDT. An exploratory analysis used all available data (model 1). Based on the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), we then established a model including variables age and MMST (model 2). To evaluate the predictive value of the four cognitive assessments, model 3 included cognitive test outcomes only. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) and area under the curve (AUC) allowed evaluating discriminative performance of the three different models using independent validation data.Results: Using N = 188 complete data sets of a total of 225 included cases, AIC identified age (p < 0.0008) and MMST (p = 0.024) as dominating predictors for MSDT outcomes with a median AUC of 0.71 (95%-CI 0.57-0.85) across different training and validation splits, while using the four cognitive test results exclusively yielded a median AUC of 0.55 (95%-CI 0.40-0.71).Conclusions: Our analysis provided strong evidence for age as the single most dominant predictor of MSDT outcomes. Adding MMST provides only weak additional predictive value for MSDT outcomes. Combining the results of four cognitive test used as standard screen in Swiss traffic medicine alone, proved to be of poor predictive value. This highlights the importance of MSDTs for balancing between the mitigation of risks by and the right to drive for the elderly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Exploring the effect of glaucomatous visual field defects of current drivers on a neuropsychological test battery.
- Author
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Tigchelaar, Iris, de Waard, Dick, Jansonius, Nomdo M., and Leinonen, Markku T.
- Subjects
- *
SCOTOMA , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *TRAIL Making Test , *MONTREAL Cognitive Assessment , *CONTRAST sensitivity (Vision) - Abstract
Purpose: This study explores the effect of glaucomatous visual field defects on several neuropsychological tests that are often used in research and in clinical settings. Methods: Nineteen glaucoma patients and nineteen healthy participants, which are current drivers and older than 65 years old were included. All participants completed the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), the Trail Making Test (TMT), the Benton Visual Retention Test (BVRT), the Snellgrove Maze Task (SMT) and the Digit Span Test (DST). All participants were also tested on contrast sensitivity and near and far visual acuity. For the glaucoma patients, visual field tests were downloaded from hospital servers. Results: On the MoCA test, glaucoma patients scored lower than the healthy group, but not significantly. On the MoCA‐Blind, the difference was statistically significant. Glaucoma patients also had lower percentile scores on the TMT, with a significant difference in the TMT‐A, but this difference largely disappeared in the calculated TMT B‐A index, which isolates the cognitive component. The BVRT and SMT showed no significant differences between both groups. In the only non‐visual test, the DST, glaucoma patients outperformed the healthy group. Glaucoma severity did not influence results, except for the BVRT on which the moderate/severe group has better scores. Conclusion: Using visual items might lead to conclusions about cognition when it should be one about vision. Therefore, careful selection of tests is needed when examining cognition in glaucoma patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Fitness to Drive: A Smartphone Application for Doctors, Patients and the Driver Licensing Authority.
- Author
-
Went, Grace S.
- Subjects
AUTOMOBILE drivers' tests ,DECISION trees ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,PUBLIC health laws ,MEDICAL laws ,MOBILE apps ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,SMARTPHONES ,LEGAL liability ,MEDICAL protocols ,PHYSICIANS ,RISK management in business - Abstract
Medical fitness to drive in Victoria is currently governed by the Austroads Fitness to Drive Guidelines. Doctors are expected to review the 188-page document and advise patients in relation to their unique medical condition. Patients must then report themselves to the driver licensing authority if they are unfit to drive. Despite multiple recommendations from coroners, there is no mandatory reporting system in Victoria, as mandatory reporting is disliked by both doctors and patients. Research has shown that binary decision trees are more accurate than doctors in determining fitness to drive. This article proposes a phone application implementing yes-no decision trees for each condition in the guidelines to increase accuracy and documentation rates and protect doctors from liability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
42. Challenges, Attitudes and Skills of Occupational Therapists towards Pre-Driving Assessments Practices in Malaysia.
- Author
-
YUAN HUI LAU, FARHAN, RASDI MOHD HANIF, DZALANI, HARUN BINTI, and XUN YUN CHANG
- Subjects
- *
OCCUPATIONAL therapists , *OLDER automobile drivers , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy education , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *DRUGGED driving , *TRAFFIC safety , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
A pre-driving assessment usually involves standardised and non-standardised tests to examine the skills for safe driving of people with disabilities. However, it is still unknown to what extent the pre-driving assessments are being practised among occupational therapists in Malaysia. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the association of challenges, attitudes, and skills of occupational therapists towards practising driving rehabilitation and explore the most used predriving assessment. A cross-sectional study had been conducted from July to September 2020. The convenient sampling method was used to recruit experienced occupational therapists in driving rehabilitation. A total of 53 therapists had completed an online survey. According to the results, the bivariate correlation between skills and challenges was positive and strong (rs = 0.680, p < 0.05). A multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) indicated that workplace variables had a significant effect on the combined dependent variables of challenges, attitudes, and skills, F(3,49) = 4.521 p = 0.007, partial Ƞ² = 0.217. This study found that the most used standardised assessment was the range of motion (n = 39, 73.6 %) and the right and left discrimination (n = 40, 75.5 %). The findings of this study identified that occupational therapists challenges and attitudes are significantly associated with the skills to practice driving rehabilitation. Malaysian occupational therapists working in the government sector reported better skills than those working in the private sector. Furthermore, numerous types of pre-driving assessments were used and vary from setting to setting. This study hopes to benefit occupational therapists and related rehabilitation practitioners towards a holistic understanding of Malaysia's driving rehabilitation practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Editorial: Effects of Driver Support Systems on Cognitive and Affective Processes Underlying Driving Behaviors
- Author
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Mariaelena Tagliabue, Amanda Stephens, Tova Rosenbloom, Mark Sullman, and Massimiliano Gastaldi
- Subjects
ADAS ,automation ,mindless regulation ,fitness to drive ,multitasking ,sense of agency ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Caregiver Prediction of Driving Fitness in Older Adults with Dementia.
- Author
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Barco, Peggy P., Wallendorf, Michael, Blenden, Gabrielle, Rutkoski, Kathleen, Dolan, Kathleen, and Carr, David
- Subjects
- *
CAREGIVER attitudes , *STATISTICS , *MEMORY , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *GERIATRIC assessment , *DEMENTIA patients , *AUTOMOBILE driving , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objectives: To determine whether caregiver opinion of fitness to drive and the level of assistance needed for functional activities are useful in determining the need for a Comprehensive Driving Evaluation. Methods: This study examined a sample (N = 179) of drivers with dementia. Caregivers completed a questionnaire that included caregiver opinion of driving fitness and the Functional Assessment Questionnaire (FAQ). A univariate simple logistic regression model was used to examine the relationship of road test failure with caregiver opinion of driving fitness and FAQ scores. From the significant predictive variables from the univariate test, multiple logictic regression models were used to examine possible combination of variables as predictors of road test failure. Results: The combination of caregiver opinion of driving fitness and the FAQ sub-item for memory were found to have modest ability in predicting failure on a standardized on-road driving assessment (AUC 0.727). Conclusions: Caregiver opinion of driving fitness and most individual higher order activities of daily living were found to be independent predictors of failure on a standardized road test. Clinical Implications: Caregiver opinion of driving fitness and ratings of functional activities may be useful for families and clinicians in considering whether an adult with dementia should be more carefully assessed for fitness to drive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Position paper: ability to drive in cerebrovascular diseases
- Author
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Peter Marx, Gerhard Hamann, Otto Busse, Thomas Mokrusch, Hendrik Niemann, Hartmut Vatter, and Bernhard Widder
- Subjects
Stroke ,Transient ischemic attack ,Intracerebral bleeding ,Subarachnoid bleeding ,Informed consent ,Fitness to drive ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract The regulations for fitness to drive after a cerebrovascular accident in the German Driving License Regulations (FeV) and the German Evaluation Guidelines for Driving Ability (BGL). are not up to date with the current medical knowledge and not consistent with regulations regarding cardiovascular diseases. This position paper presented by six medical and neuropsychological societies in Germany provides a guideline for the assessment of driving ability after diagnosis of a cerebrovascular disease and addresses three major questions: If there is a functional limitation, how can it be compensated for? What is the risk of sudden loss of control while driving in the future? Are there behavioral or personality changes or cognitive deficiencies interfering with safety while driving? Recommendations for the assessment of driving ability in different cerebrovascular diseases are presented. This article is a translation of the position paper published in Nervenarzt: Marx, P., Hamann, G.F., Busse, O. et al. Nervenarzt 90(4): 388–398.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Dizziness and Driving From a Patient Perspective
- Author
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Roeland B. van Leeuwen, Tjard R. Schermer, Carla Colijn, and Tjasse D. Bruintjes
- Subjects
dizziness ,driving ,patient perspective ,fitness to drive ,vertigo ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background: People with dizziness may experience driving-related limitations. Few data are available about the impact of dizziness on driving.Aim: The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of dizziness on driving, factors related to impairment (age, gender, and type of diagnosis), and the potential consequences for patients' ability to work. We also investigated whether the patients expected and actually received information about their dizziness-related fitness to drive from their physician.Methods: A cross-sectional, observational study was conducted in the Apeldoorn Dizziness Centre, a tertiary care referral centre for patients with dizziness. A consecutive cohort of patients was asked to complete a study-specific questionnaire about driving.Results: Between January 1, 2020, and December 20, 2020, 432 patients were included. Fifty-six percent of the patients in this group were female. The average age of patients was 58.3 years (SD 16). Overall, 191 of the 432 patients (44%) experienced limitations related to driving, and 40% of the patients who experienced limitations also experienced limitations to work related to their inability to drive. The subject of fitness to drive had not been discussed with their physician in 92% of the patients, and 24% of the whole patient group indicated that they would have liked to discuss this topic. The following factors, independently from each other, increased the chance of experiencing driving-related limitations: younger age, female sex, and the diagnosis of Meniere's disease.Conclusion: Dizzy patients, especially younger patients, women, and patients with Meniere's disease, regularly experience limitations related to driving, and this often means that they are unable to work. Driving is hardly ever discussed during a medical consultation. In our opinion, the topic of driving and dizziness should always be addressed during medical consultations in dizzy patients.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Impact and Diagnosis of Minimal or Grade 1 Hepatic Encephalopathy
- Author
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Lauridsen, Mette Munk, Vilstrup, Hendrik, and Bajaj, Jasmohan S., editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Mit Diabetes im Straßenverkehr
- Author
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Ebert, Oliver
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. (Tages-)Schläfrigkeit am Steuer: begriffliche Grundlagen zur Beurteilung der Fahreignung.
- Author
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Lakämper, Stefan
- Abstract
The number of accidents that are caused because the driver fell asleep is most likely underestimated. Clear signs of sleepiness are either misinterpreted or ignored. Independent of whether sleepiness is caused by behavior or a medical condition, the short-term and maybe even long-term fitness-to-drive is not given. Despite clear criteria for sleepiness from guidelines, medical reports and practice use a number of paraphrasing and thus misleading terms. To improve clarity in reports and to prepare future research projects, we present our understanding of such terms and suggest a more selective overall use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Dizziness and Driving From a Patient Perspective.
- Author
-
van Leeuwen, Roeland B., Schermer, Tjard R., Colijn, Carla, and Bruintjes, Tjasse D.
- Subjects
PATIENTS' attitudes ,DIZZINESS ,PHYSICIANS ,MENIERE'S disease ,MEDICAL consultation - Abstract
Background: People with dizziness may experience driving-related limitations. Few data are available about the impact of dizziness on driving. Aim: The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of dizziness on driving, factors related to impairment (age, gender, and type of diagnosis), and the potential consequences for patients' ability to work. We also investigated whether the patients expected and actually received information about their dizziness-related fitness to drive from their physician. Methods: A cross-sectional, observational study was conducted in the Apeldoorn Dizziness Centre, a tertiary care referral centre for patients with dizziness. A consecutive cohort of patients was asked to complete a study-specific questionnaire about driving. Results: Between January 1, 2020, and December 20, 2020, 432 patients were included. Fifty-six percent of the patients in this group were female. The average age of patients was 58.3 years (SD 16). Overall, 191 of the 432 patients (44%) experienced limitations related to driving, and 40% of the patients who experienced limitations also experienced limitations to work related to their inability to drive. The subject of fitness to drive had not been discussed with their physician in 92% of the patients, and 24% of the whole patient group indicated that they would have liked to discuss this topic. The following factors, independently from each other, increased the chance of experiencing driving-related limitations: younger age, female sex, and the diagnosis of Meniere's disease. Conclusion: Dizzy patients, especially younger patients, women, and patients with Meniere's disease, regularly experience limitations related to driving, and this often means that they are unable to work. Driving is hardly ever discussed during a medical consultation. In our opinion, the topic of driving and dizziness should always be addressed during medical consultations in dizzy patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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