Showing posts with label older adult driver safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label older adult driver safety. Show all posts

Friday, October 26, 2007

Poor Driving Skills- Now What?

If you are concerned about an elderly driver, closely monitor their driving before deciding whether they need to brush up on their driving skills or give up their driver’s license altogether.

1. Watch for changes in driving habits, general behavior, and health.

2. Encourage a driving evaluation through your local Department of Motor Vehicles, along with refresher driving lessons and the AARP Driver Safety course.

3. Offer some evaluation tools to assess driving risk, or work together on these quizzes.

4. Explore ways to reduce driving, such as making purchases online or through mail-order catalogs. If possible, arrange for home delivery of groceries, and home visits by personal care providers.

5. If necessary, get support from the doctor and other family members.

6. Look into alternative ways of getting around. Maybe your loved one can continue to drive some of the time (such as in the daytime or off the freeway), and alternative transportation can fill the need for rides at other times.

7. If you feel that it is time to talk to your loved one about stopping driving, approach the issue with sensitivity. A driver’s license signifies more than the ability to drive a car; it is a symbol of freedom, independence and independent living, self-sufficiency, being employed, fun and spontaneity, involvement in social and religious activities. Some see the ability to driver as a right; however, it is a priveledge. Understandably, driving is not a privilege that anyone—teenager or elder—wants to relinquish willingly. As important as it is to treat the senior driver with respect and not jump to unjust conclusions, it is also important to help the elderly driver retire from the road.

Start slowly and try to persuade the senior to give up the keys. Some approaches that may work:

Be understanding about resistance. The senior may dismiss you and refuse to listen to you. Emotion may get in the way of a rational decision.

Ask questions, rather than make demands. For example, “Would you consider not driving at night?”

Talk about safety considerations. Many senior drivers who shouldn’t be driving have already had an accident or some close calls. Remind the impaired driver of the danger of serious injuries and that the safety of others is also at risk.

Explain transportation options. Help the senior driver see that living without a car won’t make them permanently homebound. Acknowledge the lifestyle change, but also show them how to continue favorite activities and to remain mobile.

Emphasize financialsavings. The cost savings associated with giving up a car may be a selling point for some older drivers. Costs include insurance, gasoline, maintenance and repairs, and license and registration fees.

Offer rides and visits. Volunteer to come by once a week or to provide rides on a regular basis for things like grocery shopping, library visits, or doctors’ appointments.

Seek their understanding of the situation. Some elderly drivers may be aware of their faltering ability, but be reluctant to give up driving completely. Another person’s concerns may force the senior driver to act. They may even feel relieved to have someone else help make the decision to stop driving.

Should Dad Still Drive?

For many, asking this question is equivalent to opening Pandora's box. It is an issue of independence. While everyone ages differently, many people are able to continue to drive into their seventies, eighties, and even nineties. Some seniors are at higher risk for road accidents. The elderly are more likely to receive traffic citations for failing to yield, turning improperly, and running red lights and stop signs - an indication of decreased driving ability. A person 65 or older who is involved in a car accident is more likely to be seriously hurt, more likely to require hospitalization, and more likely to die than younger people involved in the same crash. In particular, fatal crash rates rise sharply after a driver has reached the age of 70.

If you know an older driver who is experiencing trouble on the road, it is important to carefully monitor the situation. There are physical changes in aging that may affect road safety:

Visual decline
Vision declines with age, which means depth perception and judging the speed of oncoming traffic become more difficult. The eyes also lose the ability to process light, which makes night vision worse and causes more sensitivity to bright sunlight and glare. By age 60, you need three times the amount of light that you did at age 20 in order to drive safely after nightfall.

Hearing loss
Approximately one-third of adults over age 65 are hearing-impaired. Because hearing loss happens gradually, a senior may not realize they are missing important cues when driving, such as honking, emergency sirens, or a child's bicycle bell.

Limited mobility and increased reaction time
With age, flexibility may decrease as response time increases. A full range of motion is crucial on the road. In addition, chronic conditions can limit mobility (rheumatoid arthritis, Parkinson's disease, sleep apnea, heart disease, or diabetes).

Medications
People often take more medications as they age. Certain medications, as well as a combination of medications and alcohol, can increase driving risk. Be particularly careful about medication side-effects and interactions between medications.

Drowsiness
Aging can make sleeping more difficult, resulting in daytime tiredness and an increased tendency to doze off during the day (or while driving). In addition, certain prescription drugs cause drowsiness.

Dementia or brain impairment
Mental impairment or dementia makes driving more dangerous and more frustrating. Brain impairment may cause delayed reactions to sudden or confusing situations on the road.

There are also problems in the driving environment that can affect drivers of any age. If an older adult is experiencing other problems, these challenges can make it even more difficult to drive safely: signs and road markings that are difficult to see or to read, complex and confusing intersections, older vehicles that lack automatic safety features, newer dashboard instrument panels with multiple displays all affect driver safety.

Warning signs of unsafe driving ability:

Abrupt lane changes, braking, or acceleration

More frequent "close calls", or dents and scrapes on the car or on fences, mailboxes, garage doors, curbs, etc.

Failing to use the turn signal, or keeping the signal on without changing lanes.

Drifting into other lanes.

Driving on the wrong side of the road or in the shoulder.

Trouble reading signs or navigating directions to get somewhere.

Missing highway exits or backing up after missing an exit.

Difficulty with Range-of-motion of the neck, affecting the ability to look over the shoulder, turn head, or move hands or feet.

Trouble moving the foot from the gas to the brake pedal, or confusing the two pedals.

Feeling more nervous or fearful while driving or feeling exhausted after driving.

More conflict on the road: other drivers honking; frustration or anger at other drivers.

Oblivious to the frustration of other drivers, not understanding why they are honking.

Reluctance from friends or relatives to be in the car with the senior driving.

Getting lost more often.

Trouble paying attention to signals, road signs, pavement markings, or pedestrians.

Slow reaction to changes in the driving environment.

Increased traffic tickets or "warnings" by traffic or law enforcement officers.

If you would like a free copy of the Driver Safety Rating Form, e-mail Health Calls at: MRadwanski@healthcallshomehealth.com