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On-road driving test performance in veterans: Effects of age,clinical diagnosis and cognitive measures
Institution:1. Department of Clinical Psychology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, United States;2. Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Minneapolis, MN, United States;3. Oregon Center for Aging & Technology, Portland, OR, United States;4. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Minnesota, MN, United States;5. Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States;1. Applied Economics & Management Research Group, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain;2. GIM-IREA, Universidad de Barcelona (Spain), Av. Diagonal, 690, 08034 Barcelona, Spain;1. Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Centre for Accident Research and Road Safety-Queensland, Australia;2. Australasian Centre for Rail Innovation, Australia;3. Queensland University of Technology (QUT), School of Optometry and Vision Science, Australia;1. University of Calgary, Canada;2. University of Regina, Canada;3. Saint Mary’s University, Canada
Abstract:Introduction: Veterans are at heightened risk of being in a motor-vehicle crash and many fail on-road driving evaluations, particularly as they age. This may be due in part to the high prevalence of age-associated conditions impacting cognition in this population, including neurodegenerative diseases (e.g., Alzheimer’s Disease) and acquired neurological conditions (e.g., cerebrovascular accident). However, understanding of the impact of referral diagnosis, age and cognition on Veterans’ on-road driving performance is limited. Methods: 109 Veterans were referred for a driving evaluation (mean age = 72.0, SD = 11.5) at a driving assessment clinic at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Healthcare System. Of the 109 Veterans enrolled, 44 were referred due to a neurodegenerative disease, 37 due to an acquired neurological condition, and 28 due to a non-neurological condition (e.g., vision loss). Veterans completed collection of health history information and administration of cognitive tests assessing visual attention, processing speed, and executive functioning, as well as a standardized, on-road driving evaluation. Results: A total of 17.9% of Veterans failed the on-road evaluation. Clinical diagnostic group was not associated with failure rate. Age was not associated with failure rates in the full sample or within diagnostic groups. After controlling for age, poorer processing speed and selective/divided attention were associated with higher failure rates in the full sample. No cognitive tests were associated with failure rates within diagnostic groups. Conclusion: Referral diagnosis and age alone are not reliable predictors of Veterans’ driving performance. Cognitive performance, specifically speed of processing and attention, may be helpful in screening Veterans’ driving safety. Practical Applications: Clinicians tasked with assessing Veterans’ driving safety should take into account cognitive performance, particularly processing speed and attention, when making decisions regarding driving safety. Age and referral diagnosis, while helpful information, are insufficient to predict outcomes on driving evaluations.
Keywords:Driving  Older adults  Cognition  Processing speed  Attention
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