Why Older People Should Gradually Drive Less Often
Why Older People Should Gradually Drive Less Often
But that doesn’t mean she hasn’t begun to modify her schedule. She tries to avoid driving at night, starting her tours at 7:30 a.m. so that she can finish her workday before it gets dark, since she finds navigating at night more challenging now. Czink also watches the weather closely: “I find that when it rains and starts to get dark, it is quite uncomfortable. I do my best to avoid it.”
Indeed, and geriatric experts say that while it may not be necessary to give up your keys because of your age, you should recognize that your abilities change with the passing years and scale back on driving accordingly.
Above all, stay alert to warning signs: If you’re starting to drive over curbs, miss signs, lose your way on familiar routes, get confused at highway exits or have accidents, you should have your vision checked and speak frankly with your doctor.
Like Czink, many older people self-regulate by slowly cutting back on their driving, says Sharona Hoffman, a professor of law and bioethics at Case Western Reserve University and author of Aging With a Plan: How a Little Thought Today Can Vastly Improve Your Tomorrow. As drivers age, they often begin to avoid interstates, sticking to slower-paced surface streets. “Merging on to a highway can be very difficult,” Hoffman notes. “It’s scarier because everyone’s going faster.”
Hoffman suggests that older folks periodically get an independent review of their performance, arranging to have a child or relative join them on an outing and give feedback. If that’s uncomfortable, she recommends having an occupational therapist offer an assessment. Sometimes the problem can be medication, such as interactions between different drugs, which may dull reaction time and perception. But changes also occur because, like a car, the human body simply begins to wear down after many years of use. The main issues include:
Gradually Putting the Brakes on Driving
How and why some aging motorists begin to limit their time behind the wheel
SelectStock / Alamy Photos At age 72, tour guide Adeodata Czink regularly finds herself driving her 2018 Toyota Corolla, showing clients around Toronto and the Niagara Falls area. And she has no plans to change her routine anytime soon based on her age. “I would be very, very upset if some youngster comes up to me and says that he has the right to take away my keys just because I have reached a certain age,” she says.But that doesn’t mean she hasn’t begun to modify her schedule. She tries to avoid driving at night, starting her tours at 7:30 a.m. so that she can finish her workday before it gets dark, since she finds navigating at night more challenging now. Czink also watches the weather closely: “I find that when it rains and starts to get dark, it is quite uncomfortable. I do my best to avoid it.”
Indeed, and geriatric experts say that while it may not be necessary to give up your keys because of your age, you should recognize that your abilities change with the passing years and scale back on driving accordingly.
Above all, stay alert to warning signs: If you’re starting to drive over curbs, miss signs, lose your way on familiar routes, get confused at highway exits or have accidents, you should have your vision checked and speak frankly with your doctor.
Like Czink, many older people self-regulate by slowly cutting back on their driving, says Sharona Hoffman, a professor of law and bioethics at Case Western Reserve University and author of Aging With a Plan: How a Little Thought Today Can Vastly Improve Your Tomorrow. As drivers age, they often begin to avoid interstates, sticking to slower-paced surface streets. “Merging on to a highway can be very difficult,” Hoffman notes. “It’s scarier because everyone’s going faster.”
Hoffman suggests that older folks periodically get an independent review of their performance, arranging to have a child or relative join them on an outing and give feedback. If that’s uncomfortable, she recommends having an occupational therapist offer an assessment. Sometimes the problem can be medication, such as interactions between different drugs, which may dull reaction time and perception. But changes also occur because, like a car, the human body simply begins to wear down after many years of use. The main issues include: