Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 4

Unsafe Driving Check List

If any of these apply, you should consider taking appropriate action. If after checking
through the list you feel action needs to be taken, click here to look at the Family
Action Flowchart, or click here for a Sample Letter of Concern.

• Doesn’t obey stop signs, traffic lights or yield right-of-way.


• Doesn’t obey other traffic signs (no left turn, no turn on red, etc.)
• Drives too slowly—usually well below the speed limit
• Gets lost routinely—is taking 2 hours to get to the hairdresser or home
• Drives aggressively
• Stops inappropriately
• Doesn’t pay attention to other vehicles, bicyclists, pedestrians, road hazards
• Doesn’t stay in lane when turning and driving straight
• Driver’s spouse, companion, driver’s friends, or passengers repeatedly
comment about close calls, near misses, driver not seeing other vehicles or
unsafe driving
• Has been involved in multiple fender benders
• Has been ticketed for moving violations
• Gets honked at often

From LePore, P.R. When You Are Concerned - A handbook for families, friends and
caregivers worried about the safety of an aging driver. Albany: New York State
Office for the Aging, p 21.

Joel A. Giambra
County Executive

Pamela M. Krawczyk
Commissioner

Some Caution Signals for Older Drivers


By JANE E. BRODY

ast summer, as a 72-year-old friend exited from a strip mall in Connecticut, her car was
struck broadside by an van she had not seen coming. She died three days later of
complications related to her injuries.

Just one year earlier, a 70-year-old woman I know was in a similar accident. She pulled
out of a filling station on Long Island into the path of a semi. Her husband eventually
died from his injuries; she survived, but after many hospitalizations and with permanent
disabilities.

Both of these accidents could have happened to younger drivers, to be sure. But the
chances are much greater that an older driver will fail to see an oncoming vehicle and be
able to react in time to avoid a collision.

And as the population ages — by the year 2020, one in five drivers will be 65 or older —
the potential for debilitating and fatal accidents among older drivers (and their innocent
victims) will grow accordingly unless everyone recognizes the limitations inflicted by
advancing age and takes steps to compensate for them. No group but teenagers has more
accidents or a higher vehicular fatality rate per mile driven.

Now, nearly half of older drivers live in suburban areas and more than a quarter live in
rural areas where motor vehicles are needed to reach shopping and services and where
public transportation is either sparse or nonexistent. And there are often no family
members nearby or friends available to provide the needed rides.

Many groups — AAA, AARP, city and state departments on aging and traffic safety, the
National Institute on Aging, among others — have developed informative packets,
booklets and safe driving courses. And, they continue to press for improvements in
vehicular design and road safety features, all intended to keep older drivers on the road
safely.

If you know which physical and mental changes that accompany advancing age can affect
the ability to drive in comfort and safety, you can better appreciate the value of the
recommendations and have an easier time assessing whether it is wise for you or the
older people in your life to continue driving.

Common Effects of Aging

You need not have any chronic illnesses or obvious disabilities for the effects of aging to
affect your driving skills. Here is what happens to virtually everyone:

VISION DEFICITS Driving experts say that 90 percent of the information needed to
drive safely is visual. Yet, as people get older, four crucial visual abilities diminish: visual
acuity — the ability to see clearly what is ahead of you, especially at night; peripheral
vision — the ability to see what is happening to the left and right while looking straight
ahead; accommodation — the speed with which your eyes adjust to changes in light and
dark and near and far images, and depth perception — the ability to judge how fast other
cars are moving.

Furthermore, older people are more prone to being temporarily blinded by the glare of
headlights, either from cars and trucks coming toward them or in their mirrors from
vehicles behind them. A 55-year- old person takes, on average, eight times longer than a
16-year-old to recover from glare. Colors, especially red, become harder to see with age.
Some older drivers take twice as long as younger drivers to recognize the flash of brake
lights.

Other common age-related deficits include eye muscle dysfunction, which impairs the
ability to scan the driving environment, and poor contrast sensitivity, which can make it
hard to detect curves in the road, see a gray vehicle at an intersection or a pedestrian at a
crosswalk or see clearly in bad weather.

According to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, the amount of light needed to drive
doubles about every 13 years. That means a 60-year-old driver needs about 10 times as
much light as a 19-year-old to see clearly.

BODY CHANGES Few people over 65 need to be told that with advancing age joints
tend to stiffen, making it more difficult to turn one's head when pulling out of a parking
area or when backing up. Muscles gradually weaken, and that weakening can impair a
person's ability to steer and brake. Reaction time slows, increasing the response time
when faced with any sort of road hazard, especially a vehicle that suddenly stops or turns
in front of you.

And hearing deficits common in older people can affect their ability to detect and respond
appropriately to the sirens of emergency vehicles, railroad crossing signals and the
warning horns of other drivers.

COGNITIVE CHANGES Your mind may be just as sharp but it works more slowly as
you get older. Thus, in addition to having slower reflexes, older people tend to have
greater difficulty doing more than one thing at a time — absorbing new information from
their surroundings and reacting accordingly. Older drivers also are more easily distracted
by noise or other disturbances, including the radio and the conversation of others in the
car.

COMMON HEALTH PROBLEMS Then there are a host of disorders that become
increasingly common with age that can further limit your ability to handle a motor
vehicle safely.

To the normal effects of aging on the eyes may be added such problems as cataracts (a
clouding of the lenses that impairs visual acuity and increases sensitivity to glare),
macular degeneration (a gradual loss of central vision) and glaucoma (increased eye
pressure that limits peripheral vision). Other common age-related disorders that can
impair driving skills include arthritis, diabetes, insomnia, Parkinson's disease, heart
rhythm abnormalities, stroke, depression and dementia.

Movements needed to handle a motor vehicle safely can be limited in someone with
arthritis or Parkinson's disease or a person who has suffered a stroke.

Diabetes can cause vision-impairing eye damage (diabetic retinopathy) and, among those
with widely fluctuating blood sugar levels, can sometimes result in a loss of
consciousness. Irregular heart rhythms can cause dizziness while driving, and chronic
insomnia can diminish alertness and increase the risk of dozing off at the wheel.

Depression, which may limit a person's ability to pay attention and to obtain restful sleep,
can also impair driving skills. And the gradual onset of dementia can cause memory
problems and behavioral difficulties that make safe driving problematic, yet dementia and
its effects are usually not recognized by the affected person.

Many of the medications taken to treat the various infirmities of age can further diminish
driving skills.

Older drivers are likely to be taking many more prescription and over-the-counter drugs
than their younger counterparts.

Although people over 65 represent about 11 percent of the population, they use 25
percent of all prescription drugs, plus a host of nonprescription remedies.

Drugs that can interfere with safe driving include sleep aids, antidepressants and
antianxiety drugs, painkillers, antihistamines, cough and cold remedies and insulin and
other drugs used to treat diabetes.

Alcohol, which is also a drug, can have an ever worsening effect on driving skills as
people age. With advancing age, tolerance for alcohol steadily declines — a person gets
tipsy on less and less alcohol — and the effects of alcohol last longer.

Next week: Compensating for the effects of age on driving ability.

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi