Rapoport M J, Weegar K, Kadulina Y, Bédard M, Carr D, Charlton J L, Dow J, Gillespie I A, Hawley C A, Koppel S, McCullagh S, Molnar F, Murie-Fernández M, Naglie G, O'Neill D, Shortt S, Simpson C, Tuokko H A, Vrkljan B H, Marshall S
From the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON M4N 3M5, Canada, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 2J7, Canada.
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON K1H 8M2, Canada.
QJM. 2015 Nov;108(11):859-69. doi: 10.1093/qjmed/hcv038. Epub 2015 Feb 5.
Medical illnesses are associated with a modest increase in crash risk, although many individuals with acute or chronic conditions may remain safe to drive, or pose only temporary risks. Despite the extensive use of national guidelines about driving with medical illness, the quality of these guidelines has not been formally appraised.
To systematically evaluate the quality of selected national guidelines about driving with medical illness.
A literature search of bibliographic databases and Internet resources was conducted to identify the guidelines, each of which was formally appraised.
Eighteen physicians or researchers from Canada, Australia, Ireland, USA and UK appraised nine national guidelines, applying the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE II) instrument.
Relative strengths were found in AGREE II scores for the domains of scope and purpose, stakeholder involvement and clarity of presentation. However, all guidelines were given low ratings on rigour of development, applicability and documentation of editorial independence. Overall quality ratings ranged from 2.25 to 5.00 out of 7.00, with modifications recommended for 7 of the guidelines. Intra-class coefficients demonstrated fair to excellent appraiser agreement (0.57-0.79).
This study represents the first systematic evaluation of national-level guidelines for determining medical fitness to drive. There is substantive variability in the quality of these guidelines, and rigour of development was a relative weakness. There is a need for rigorous, empirically derived guidance for physicians and licensing authorities when assessing driving in the medically ill.
尽管许多患有急性或慢性疾病的人仍可安全驾驶,或仅构成临时风险,但医学疾病与撞车风险适度增加有关。尽管广泛使用了关于患病驾驶的国家指南,但这些指南的质量尚未得到正式评估。
系统评估选定的关于患病驾驶的国家指南的质量。
对书目数据库和互联网资源进行文献检索以识别指南,并对每个指南进行正式评估。
来自加拿大、澳大利亚、爱尔兰、美国和英国的18名医生或研究人员使用研究与评估指南评估工具(AGREE II)对9项国家指南进行了评估。
在AGREE II评分中,范围与目的、利益相关者参与度和表述清晰度等领域存在相对优势。然而,所有指南在制定的严谨性、适用性和编辑独立性文件记录方面的评分都很低。总体质量评分在7.00分中从2.25分到5.00分不等,7项指南建议进行修改。组内系数显示评估者之间的一致性为中等至优秀(0.57 - 0.79)。
本研究是对确定医学上适合驾驶的国家级指南的首次系统评估。这些指南的质量存在很大差异,制定的严谨性是一个相对薄弱环节。在评估患病者的驾驶能力时,需要为医生和发证当局提供严格的、基于实证的指导。