Desapriya Ediriweera, Harjee Rahana, Brubacher Jeffrey, Chan Herbert, Hewapathirane D Sesath, Subzwari Sayed, Pike Ian
Department of Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, 7th Floor, 828 West 10th Avenue, Research Pavilion, Vancouver, BC, Canada, V5Z 1M9.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Feb 21;2014(2):CD006252. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006252.pub4.
Demographic data in North America, Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand suggest a rapid growth in the number of persons over the age of 65 years as the baby boomer generation passes retirement age. As older adults make up an increasing proportion of the population, they are an important consideration when designing future evidence-based traffic safety policies, particularly those that lead to restrictions or cessation of driving. Research has shown that cessation of driving among older drivers can lead to negative emotional consequences such as depression and loss of independence. Older adults who continue to drive tend to do so less frequently than other demographic groups and are more likely to be involved in a road traffic crash, possibly due to what is termed the "low mileage bias". Available research suggests that older driver crash risk estimates based on traditional exposure measures are prone to bias. When annual driving distances are taken in to consideration, older drivers with low driving distances have an increased crash risk, while those with average or high driving distances tend to be safer drivers when compared to other age groups. In addition, older drivers with lower distance driving tend to drive in urban areas which, due to more complex and demanding traffic patterns, tend to be more accident-prone. Failure to control for actual annual driving distances and driving locations among older drivers is referred to as "low mileage bias" in older driver mobility research. It is also important to note that older drivers are more vulnerable to serious injury and death in the event of a traffic crash due to changes in physiology associated with normal ageing. Vision, cognition, and motor functions or skills (e.g., strength, co-ordination, and flexibility) are three key domains required for safe driving. To drive safely, an individual needs to be able to see road signs, road side objects, traffic lights, roadway markings, other vulnerable road users, and other vehicles on the road, among many other cues-all while moving, and under varying light and weather conditions. It is equally important that drivers must have appropriate peripheral vision to monitor objects and movement to identify possible threats in the driving environment. It is, therefore, not surprising that there is agreement among researchers that vision plays a significant role in driving performance. Several age-related processes/conditions impair vision, thus it follows that vision testing of older drivers is an important road safety issue. The components of visual function essential for driving are acuity, static acuity, dynamic acuity, visual fields, visual attention, depth perception, and contrast sensitivity. These indices are typically not fully assessed by licensing agencies. Also, current vision screening regulations and cut-off values required to pass a licensing test vary from country to country. Although there is a clear need to develop evidence-based and validated tools for vision screening for driving, the effectiveness of existing vision screening tools remains unclear. This represents an important and highly warranted initiative to increase road safety worldwide.
To assess the effects of vision screening interventions for older drivers to prevent road traffic injuries and fatalities.
For the update of this review we searched the Cochrane Injuries Group's Specialised Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library), MEDLINE (OvidSP), Embase (OvidSP), PsycINFO (OvidSP) and ISI Web of Science: (CPCI-S & SSCI). The searches were conducted up to 26 September 2013.
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and controlled before and after studies comparing vision screening to non-screening of drivers aged 55 years and older, and which assessed the effect on road traffic crashes, injuries, fatalities and any involvement in traffic law violations.
Two review authors independently screened the reference lists for eligible articles and independently assessed the articles for inclusion against the criteria. If suitable trials had been available, two review authors would have independently extracted data using a standardised extraction form.
No studies were found that met the inclusion criteria for this review.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Most countries require a vision screening test for the renewal of an individual's driver's licence. There is, however, lack of methodologically sound studies to assess the effects of vision screening tests on subsequent motor vehicle crash reduction. There is a need to develop valid and reliable tools of vision screening that can predict driving performance.
北美、欧洲、亚洲、澳大利亚和新西兰的人口数据显示,随着婴儿潮一代达到退休年龄,65岁以上人口数量迅速增长。由于老年人在人口中所占比例日益增加,在设计未来基于证据的交通安全政策时,尤其是那些导致驾驶限制或停止驾驶的政策时,他们是一个重要的考虑因素。研究表明,老年驾驶员停止驾驶会导致负面情绪后果,如抑郁和失去独立性。继续开车的老年人往往比其他人口群体开车频率更低,并且更有可能卷入道路交通事故,这可能是由于所谓的“低里程偏差”。现有研究表明,基于传统暴露量度的老年驾驶员撞车风险估计容易产生偏差。当考虑年度驾驶距离时,驾驶距离短的老年驾驶员撞车风险增加,而与其他年龄组相比,驾驶距离平均或较长的老年驾驶员往往是更安全的驾驶员。此外,驾驶距离较短的老年驾驶员往往在城市地区驾驶,由于交通模式更加复杂和要求更高,城市地区往往更容易发生事故。在老年驾驶员流动性研究中,未能控制老年驾驶员的实际年度驾驶距离和驾驶地点被称为“低里程偏差”。同样重要的是要注意,由于正常衰老相关的生理变化,老年驾驶员在交通事故中更容易受到严重伤害和死亡。视力、认知和运动功能或技能(如力量、协调性和灵活性)是安全驾驶所需的三个关键领域。为了安全驾驶,一个人需要能够看到路标、路边物体、交通信号灯、道路标线、其他易受伤害的道路使用者以及道路上的其他车辆等众多线索——所有这些都要在移动过程中,以及在不同的光照和天气条件下。同样重要的是,驾驶员必须有适当的周边视力来监测物体和运动,以识别驾驶环境中的潜在威胁。因此,研究人员一致认为视力在驾驶性能中起着重要作用也就不足为奇了。几个与年龄相关的过程/状况会损害视力,因此对老年驾驶员进行视力测试是一个重要的道路安全问题。驾驶所需的视觉功能组件包括视力、静态视力、动态视力、视野、视觉注意力、深度感知和对比敏感度。这些指标通常未得到发证机构的全面评估。此外,目前不同国家的视力筛查法规和通过驾照考试所需的临界值各不相同。尽管显然需要开发基于证据且经过验证的驾驶视力筛查工具,但现有视力筛查工具的有效性仍不明确。这是一项重要且非常有必要的举措,旨在提高全球道路安全。
评估针对老年驾驶员的视力筛查干预措施对预防道路交通伤害和死亡的效果。
为更新本综述,我们检索了Cochrane伤害组专业注册库、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(Cochrane图书馆)、MEDLINE(OvidSP)、Embase(OvidSP)、PsycINFO(OvidSP)和ISI科学网(CPCI - S & SSCI)。检索截至2013年9月26日。
随机对照试验(RCT)以及前后对照研究,比较对55岁及以上驾驶员进行视力筛查与不进行筛查的情况,并评估对道路交通事故、伤害、死亡以及任何交通违法行为的影响。
两位综述作者独立筛选参考文献列表以寻找符合条件的文章,并根据标准独立评估文章是否纳入。如果有合适的试验可用,两位综述作者会使用标准化提取表独立提取数据。
未找到符合本综述纳入标准的研究。
大多数国家要求在更新个人驾照时进行视力筛查测试。然而,缺乏方法学上可靠的研究来评估视力筛查测试对随后减少机动车撞车事故的效果。需要开发能够预测驾驶性能的有效且可靠的视力筛查工具。