Friday, November 14, 2014
People
with
Parkinson’s
disease
drive
faster,
have
slower
reaction
times
on
their
brakes
and
struggle
to
assess
dangerous
driving
conditions,
according
to
University
of
Waterloo
research.
“We
found
substantial
differences
in
the
driving
behaviours
of
those
suffering
from
Parkinson’s
disease
and
healthy
drivers,
some
of
which
are
certainly
cause
for
concern,”
says
the
project’s
lead
investigator,
Alexander
Crizzle,
a
professor
in
Waterloo’s
School
of
Public
Health
and
Health
Systems.
![Older man driving a car](/public-health-sciences/sites/default/files/uploads/images/parkinsons-driving.jpg)
Using
specialized
in-car
monitoring
instruments,
researchers
combined
two
types
of
electronic
data
loggers—
including
one
with
GPS
capabilities—
to
compare
the
or
in
interviews.
They
also
have
a
greater
tendency
to
drive
in
high-risk
situations,
namely
at
night,
in
bad
weather
or
at
rush
hour,
than
they
report.
“Effective
self-regulation
depends
on
being
able
to
recognize
one’s
deficits
and
compensate
accordingly,”
says
Crizzle.
“Often
time
drivers
with
cognitive
impairment
lack
such
insight.”
30 km/h faster on highway
The
study
also
found
that
people
with
Parkinson’s
disease
travel
around
30
km/h
faster
on
highways
than
their
healthy
peers
and
show
more
abrupt
breaking
patterns.
“We
aren’t
sure
why
they
drive
so
much
faster,
but
we
suspect
it
is
a
result
of
cognitive
load.
They
may
not
be
monitoring
speed
because
of
difficulty
processing
all
the
other
stimuli
around
them.
In
a
sense,
they
become
fixated
on
objects
on
the
road-
at
the
expense
of
their
gas
pedal.”
People with Parkinson’s may fear losing license
Research
suggests
that
at
time
of
diagnosis,
more
than
20
per
cent
of
Parkinson’s
patients
already
have
some
degree
of
cognitive
impairment.
“The
gap
between
what
Parkinson’s
patients
report
and
their
actual
driving
patterns
may
be
due
to
poorer
cognitive
scores,
or
simply
the
desire
to
present
themselves
favorably
for
fear
of
losing
their
license,”
says
Crizzle.
Call for new assessments
To
date
there
is
no
assessment
tool
or
screening
battery
that
predicts
fitness-to-drive
in
those
with
Parkinson’s
disease—
something
Crizzle
hopes
his
research
will
help
change.
“Many
physicians
don’t
talk
to
their
patients
about
driving,
and
those
that
do
may
overestimate
their
capabilities,”
he
says.
“Certainly
not
all
individuals
with
Parkinson’s
are
unfit
drivers,
but
if
we
can
reduce
crash
risk
by
integrating
assessments
into
the
assessment
process,
everyone
will
be
safer.”