Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, Arlington, Virginia 22201, USA.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2011 Dec;12(6):568-75. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2011.616249.
The primary goal of the study was to identify to what extent older people modify their driving, what influences them to do so, and how self-regulatory behavior changes over time in relation to changes in perceived impairments and lifestyle characteristics.
Participants 65 and older (n = 2650) were recruited while renewing their driver's licenses in Connecticut, Kentucky, and Rhode Island and were interviewed by telephone about current driving patterns, recent changes in driving, functional abilities related to driving (i.e., vision, memory, physical mobility, diagnosed medical conditions), crash involvements, and lifestyle characteristics. Participants were called annually to participate in follow-up telephone interviews; 2057 completed a second interview, 1698 completed 3 interviews, and 1437 completed all 4 interviews. Stepwise regression analyses examined how changes in impairments and life events (i.e., retiring, becoming widowed or divorced) related to changes in the number of miles driven during a typical week and in the number of driving situations avoided.
Based on information provided in the initial survey, participants who completed all 4 surveys were slightly younger, more likely to be married, slightly less impaired in terms of physical mobility and medical conditions, and drove more weekly miles and avoided fewer driving situations compared with those who dropped out. Participants who completed all 4 interviews reported driving an average of 94 miles per week in year 1 compared with 78 miles in year 4. Reported impairments generally were low to moderate and changed little. Analyses comparing years 1 and 4 indicated that drivers drove 35 fewer miles per week if they retired or lost their job and 61 fewer miles if they moved from a retirement home to a private home or assisted living. They drove 25 more miles per week on average if they became widowed or divorced. Small increases in the number of driving situations avoided were associated with increasing impairments in memory and mobility.
Lifestyle changes such as becoming widowed or divorced or retiring were associated with changes in mileages. Older drivers with worsening memory and physical mobility regulated their driving to some extent by avoiding more driving situations, confirming the hypothesis that some older drivers do take steps to compensate for increases in some perceived impairments. However, during the 3-year study period, reported changes were not large, perhaps because older drivers with larger changes were among those who dropped out (46% of those who took the first survey).
本研究的主要目标是确定老年人在多大程度上改变驾驶行为,影响他们这样做的因素是什么,以及与感知障碍和生活方式特征变化相关的自我调节行为如何随时间变化。
在康涅狄格州、肯塔基州和罗得岛州更新驾照时,招募了 65 岁及以上的参与者(n=2650),并通过电话询问他们当前的驾驶模式、最近的驾驶变化、与驾驶相关的功能能力(即视力、记忆力、身体活动能力、诊断出的医疗状况)、事故参与情况和生活方式特征。参与者每年都会被电话邀请参加后续访谈;2057 人完成了第二次访谈,1698 人完成了 3 次访谈,1437 人完成了所有 4 次访谈。逐步回归分析考察了感知障碍和生活事件(即退休、丧偶或离婚)的变化如何与每周典型行驶里程和避免的驾驶情况数量的变化相关。
基于初始调查提供的信息,完成所有 4 次调查的参与者年龄略小,已婚的可能性更大,身体活动能力和医疗状况的障碍略小,每周行驶里程更多,避免的驾驶情况更少。与退出者相比,完成所有 4 次访谈的参与者报告在第 1 年平均每周行驶 94 英里,而在第 4 年则行驶 78 英里。报告的障碍通常较低且变化不大。比较第 1 年和第 4 年的分析表明,如果司机退休或失业,每周行驶里程减少 35 英里;如果从养老院搬到私人住宅或辅助生活设施,每周行驶里程减少 61 英里。如果他们丧偶或离婚,他们每周平均多行驶 25 英里。避免的驾驶情况数量的小幅度增加与记忆力和活动能力的逐渐下降有关。
生活方式的改变,如丧偶或离婚或退休,与里程的变化有关。记忆力和身体活动能力下降的老年司机在某种程度上通过避免更多的驾驶情况来调节他们的驾驶,这证实了一些老年司机确实采取措施来弥补一些感知障碍的增加的假设。然而,在 3 年的研究期间,报告的变化不大,也许是因为较大变化的老年司机是那些退出者(参加第一次调查的人中的 46%)。