CBC Edition

When should someone with dementia stop driving? This resource helps seniors decide

- Christine Birak, Marcy Cuttler, Stephanie Dubois

Ron Posno enjoyed the freedom of driving a car.

He says was hooked the minute he sat down as a teenager in a family friend's old Ford truck and started the engine.

"I loved it," said Posno, 83, of London, Ont.

But now, more than 70 years later, Posno has decid‐ ed to hang his car keys up for good. He says the decision came after two kids on bikes passed in front of his car un‐ expectedly while he looked over his shoulder before merging into a busy intersec‐ tion near his home.

"Well that terrified me, be‐ cause if I had started, I would have run into them, no ques‐ tion."

He says he knew that he would eventually have to stop driving after being diag‐ nosed with dementia in 2016. But it wasn't until he had the recent scare and watched a video on driving and dementia that Posno re‐ alized it was time.

"I don't really ever want to be in an accident where it hurts somebody or worse — to kill somebody — when I have a choice. So I'm getting out of driving now," he re‐ members telling his wife, Sandy.

Decision can be emo‐ tional

Posno's decision to stop driving isn't usually what hap‐ pens with people with de‐ mentia, doctors say.

Often, physicians see peo‐ ple when their dementia has progressed into the later stages and driving is no longer safe, said Dr. Mark Rapoport, a geriatric psychol‐ ogist and acting head of geri‐ atric psychiatry at Sunny‐ brook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.

"So we have to be the bearers of bad news that dri‐ ving has ended," he said.

After years of those of‐ ten difficult conversati­ons with patients, Rapoport and colleagues from Sunnybrook, Baycrest Health Sciences and the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegen­eration in Aging created a new online re‐ source.

They call it the Driving and Dementia Roadmap. It's a website with informatio­n, videos, worksheets, and other materials to help someone understand the importance of giving up driving — and when to do it. There's also in‐ formation for care providers on how to broach the subject.

Doctors say there is a huge need for this type of resource, as the number of Canadians with dementia is expected to grow substantia­lly in the next decade.

LISTEN | Dementia and driving:

Since it launched in Octo‐ ber, doctors involved with the roadmap say it has been pop‐ ular with Canadians looking for more informatio­n. It also has attracted the attention of the World Health Organiza‐ tion, which selected it as a credible dementia resource.

It's informatio­n that is badly needed, said Dr. Gary Naglie, professor of geriatric medicine at the University of Toronto and vice president of medical services at Baycrest.

He says it can be very hard to tell a patient they can no longer drive, as it brings up many emotions.

"I've been fired more than once by patients after I've had to do this. It's just a very difficult thing to do," said Naglie, who helped create the roadmap.

"It certainly made me keenly aware that people's understand­ing of this issue is extremely limited."

Why there comes a time to stop driving

Dementia is an umbrella term that is used to describe symptoms affecting brain function, often characteri­zed by a decline in memory, plan‐ ning, judgment, language, as well as physical changes like loss of co-ordination. It com‐ monly is diagnosed in those 65 and older, but those who are younger can also be diag‐ nosed (though less common).

Canada's population is ag‐ ing, and projection­s show that the number of people with dementia will grow. In 2020, 597,000 Canadians were living with dementia, accord‐ ing to the Alzheimer Society of Canada. That number is ex‐ pected to almost double by 2030.

Dementia is a chronic con‐ dition, and physical and men‐ tal symptoms generally wors‐ en over time.

Most people in the early stages of dementia can still drive. But as dementia pro‐ gresses, it will start to put the person at risk of potentiall­y dangerous driving behaviours like slower response times or driving through stop signs or red lights, notes the Alzheimer Society of Canada.

Since dementia can also af‐ fect someone's memory, it could lead them to get lost while driving. Visual percep‐ tion is also altered over time, so backing into a parking space or gauging the distance of other vehicles can become challengin­g, said Naglie.

The progressio­n of the condition is why he says it's so important to have conver‐ sations about driving or other aspects of care early in a diag‐ nosis.

Researcher­s have shown that if a person with dementia is part of the care planning early on, then you get "much better results," Naglie added.

"We can't keep doing what we're doing, which is not talk‐ ing about it, because I've seen the consequenc­es of that. I've experience­d the conse‐ quences of that. It's not fun for anyone and it's a terrible result for the adult with de‐ mentia," Naglie said.

Instead, he recommends using the roadmap to:

Broach the conversati­on about driving with the individ‐ ual with dementia. Make a plan for when they're no longer able to drive. Manage when the person with demen‐ tia won't stop driving.

All provinces and territo‐ ries require doctors to report medical conditions that affect driving.

In Ontario, a person with dementia may be also re‐ quired to do what is called a functional driving assessment to keep their licence. Family members and the individual can also request this medical assessment and on-road eval‐ uation.

'We're on their side' Nellemarie Hyde, an occu‐ pational therapist and pro‐ gram supervisor at Saint Eliza‐ beth Health Care in Toronto, is part of that assessment.

She says the process isn't always easy for seniors with new medical conditions like dementia.

"They're generally always very nervous. Sometimes they're angry or annoyed at having to do this. Our goal, we tell them right from the get-go, we're on their side [and] we want them to do as well as they can," Hyde said.

For many, driving isn't just about going from point A to point B, Rapoport says. Dri‐ ving can be connected to a person's identity and autono‐ my.

"It's also a harbinger that other changes are coming. It's one of the key areas of transi‐ tion in dementia, very similar to preparing for a transition to long-term care," he said.

Posno says he misses the freedom of just hopping into a car and driving himself to a doctor's appointmen­t or the grocery store.

"But do I regret having to

do it? No way."

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