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Aged drivers wreaking havoc on roads

JAPANESE GOVERNMENT IS STEPPING UP EFFORTS TO GET THE MOST DANGEROUS SENIORS OFF THE ROAD

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n the past several weeks alone, elderly Japanese drivers have been wreaking havoc across the country: breaking through median barriers into oncoming traffic, ploughing over pedestrian­s crossing the road, and smashing into other cars. In all these cases, somebody was killed.

And as Japan’s population continues to age — meaning more and more older drivers behind the wheel — the problem is only getting worse: Drivers aged 75 and over were connected to 459 fatal accidents last year, 13 per cent of Japan’s total, up from 7.4 per cent a decade earlier, National Police Agency data show. Stopping the carnage on the roads is an “urgent problem,” the agency said in a statement.

“Preventing road accidents caused by changes in the physical condition of drivers is an urgent issue that needs to be dealt with,” Mineko Baba, of Keio University’s Center for Integrated Medical Research, wrote in a research report last year. “Laws and society haven’t caught up to the situation of the rapidly increasing number of dementia patients.”

Ageing population

Currently, one quarter of Japanese are 65 or older, and the proportion is forecast to reach 38 per cent within five decades.

In one of the worst recent incidents, last October an 87-year-old man crashed his light truck into a group of children walking to school in Yokohama, killing a 6-yearold boy and injuring two others. This year in June, a 74-year-old woman killed a man driving the other way in Fukuoka after jumping the median. Just this past weekend, two people in their 80s were killed when their car collided head-on with a large truck inside a tunnel in Gifu prefecture, according to local media reports. The truck driver was uninjured. The reports said one of the vehicles likely crossed the Centre line.

The issue is a “major challenge” for authoritie­s, said Hiroki Sasaki, an accident investigat­or and former policeman. The government is stepping up efforts to get the most dangerous seniors off the road. Changes to the law took effect in March requiring drivers over 75 to take a cognitive test when renewing their licences or if they commit offences such as running a red light or turning into the wrong lane. Those who fail are ordered to undergo a medical exam. If they flunk that, they’re stripped of their licences. As many as 15,000 licences a year may be forcibly revoked, the National Police Agency projects.

Giving it up

Older drivers are also increasing­ly volunteeri­ng to hand over their licences. Under a programme that’s been in place for almost two decades, 345,000 people relinquish­ed their driving credential­s in 2016, up 21 per cent from a year earlier.

In the first three months after the new law took effect, 1,271 old people a day on average returned their licences, up from 946 a day in 2016, according to the National Police Agency.

One of them is Katsutoshi Kamei, a 79-year-old retiree from Tokorozawa, west of Tokyo, who gave up his licence in November after hearing about the increase in accidents. He said he wanted to stop driving “before something like that happened.”

Some companies are offering incentives for senior citizens to hand over their driving papers. Elderly people who give up driving in Tokorozawa are offered a year of free transporta­tion on a community bus service that runs throughout the city, plus 20 per cent off purchases at Mister Donut, a unit of Duskin Co.

Other perks include a 10 per cent discount on a local home-help service, 10 per cent off taxi fares and even discounts on funeral services.

Banks and insurance companies are also getting in on the act. Bank of Kyoto Ltd. gives a 1 percentage point discount on car loans for anyone living with a senior citizen who has given up the keys. Awa Bank Ltd., on the western island of Shikoku, offers an additional 0.3 percentage point on time deposits for elderly folks who stop driving. ’

Losing the right to drive and the independen­ce that accompanie­s it may also hasten physical decline and contribute to dementia, said Hiroshi Takahashi, a former professor of welfare policy who advises government­s on elderly care.

Kamei, the 79-year-old retiree from Tokorozawa, now relies on his 69-year-old wife to drive him around.

“The way she’s going, I think she’ll be OK for another 10 years or so,” he said. “And I guess it’ll be taxis after that.” 14% 12 10 8

6 2006 Over 75 2016 65-74 7 (000’s) 6 5 4

3 2006 Percentage­s may not add up to 100% due to rounding 30-64 Under 30 Unknown 2016

 ?? Getty Image ?? Seniors take a simulated driving test at a driving school in Kofu, Yamanashi. Drivers over 75 are now required to take a cognitive test when renewing their licences.
Getty Image Seniors take a simulated driving test at a driving school in Kofu, Yamanashi. Drivers over 75 are now required to take a cognitive test when renewing their licences.
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