Conference Proceeding

Comorbidities in Drivers with Parkinson Disease

Authors
  • Maud Ranchet (Georgia Regents University, Augusta, GA)
  • Mark Tant (Belgian Road Safety Institute, Brussels, Belgium)
  • Abiodun E Akinwuntan (Georgia Regents University, Augusta, GA)
  • Hannes Devos (Georgia Regents University, Augusta, GA)

Abstract

Previous studies have shown that comorbidities have an impact on driving performance in older adults. No study has established the relationships between comorbidities and driving in persons with Parkinson disease (PD). The aims of this study were (1) to report the types of comorbidity in a group of 111 drivers with PD and (2) to identify whether the comorbidity associated with PD is a predictor of overall fitness-to-drive decisions, crashes, and validity duration of driving license. Results showed that 72 participants (64.9%) had only Parkinson disease, and 39 (35.1%) participants had one or more medical conditions in addition to PD. The most frequent comorbidities were visual disorders (26.4%), heart and blood disorders (16.2%), neurological disorders other than PD (11.8%), and locomotor disorders (11.8%). Contrarily to what we expected, we did not find any significant associations between comorbidities and overall fitness-to-drive decisions, car crashes, or validity duration of driving license. We conclude that in this sample of drivers with PD, comorbidity was not a significant predictor of overall fitness-to-drive decisions.

How to Cite:

Ranchet, M. & Tant, M. & Akinwuntan, A. & Devos, H., (2015) “Comorbidities in Drivers with Parkinson Disease”, Driving Assessment Conference 8(2015), 43-49. doi: https://doi.org/10.17077/drivingassessment.1549

Rights: Copyright © 2015 the author(s)

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Published on
23 Jun 2015
Peer Reviewed