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Most people with mild dementia can continue to drive, but dementia is progressive and many patients and clinicians will be faced with questions about driving safety in the course of their illness. Determining when this happens is a complex decision, with risks of personal and public safety needing to be weighed against individual patient benefits of driving in terms of autonomy, independence and well-being. Decisions need to make reference to cognitive abilities, as well as other factors including physical comorbidity, vision, mobility, insight and history of driving errors and accidents. Deciding to stop driving, or being required to stop driving is often difficult for patients to accept and can be a particularly problematic consequence of a dementia diagnosis. Legal frameworks help in decision-making but may not provide sufficient detail to advise individual patients. We review the current guidelines and evidence relating to driving and dementia to help clinicians answer questions about driving safety and to consider the full range of assessment tools available.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/eb-2016-102485

Type

Journal article

Journal

Evid Based Ment Health

Publication Date

11/2016

Volume

19

Pages

110 - 113

Keywords

GERIATRIC MEDICINE, MENTAL HEALTH, PRIMARY CARE, Accidents, Traffic, Automobile Driving, Clinical Decision-Making, Decision Making, Dementia, Humans, Personal Autonomy, Psychological Tests, United Kingdom