# Toward Safe and Confident Silver Drivers: Interview Study Investigating Older Adults’ Driving Practices

**Authors:** Sunyoung Kim, Phaneendra Sivangula

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/57402 · JMIR Aging · 2024-08-12

## TL;DR

This study explores how older adults maintain safe and confident driving habits, highlighting the gap between their self-perceived skills and the challenges they face due to aging.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific factors affecting older adults' driving and proposes strategies to bridge the gap between self-perception and actual driving challenges.

## Key findings

- Older adults often overestimate their driving abilities despite age-related limitations like vision and memory decline.
- Health conditions and medication routines significantly impact driving performance and confidence.
- Strategies such as regular assessments and open dialogue can help older adults drive more safely and confidently.

## Abstract

As the aging population in the United States continues to increase rapidly, preserving the mobility and independence of older adults becomes increasingly critical for enabling aging in place successfully. While personal vehicular transport remains a popular choice among this demographic due to its provision of independence and control over their lives, age-related changes may heighten the risk of common driving errors and diminish driving abilities.

This study aims to investigate the driving practices of older adults and their efforts to maintain safe and confident driving habits. Specifically, we sought to identify the factors that positively and negatively influence older adults’ driving performance and confidence, as well as the existing efforts put into sustaining their driving abilities.

We recruited 20 adults aged ≥65 years who remained active drivers during the recruitment from the greater New York area. Then, we conducted semistructured interviews with them to examine their perceptions, needs, and challenges regarding safe and confident driving.

Our findings uncovered a notable disparity between older adults’ self-perceived driving skills and the challenges they face, particularly caused by age-related limitations and health conditions such as vision and memory declines and medication routines. Drawing on these findings, we proposed strategies to bridge this gap and empower older adults to drive safely and confidently, including fostering a realistic understanding of their capabilities, encouraging open dialogue regarding their driving, encouraging regular assessments, and increasing awareness of available resources.

This study uncovered a noticeable disparity between the perceived driving competence of older adults and the actual challenges they confront while driving. This divergence underscores a significant need for better support beyond the existing aid available to preserve older adults’ driving skills. We hope that our recommendations will offer valuable insights for practitioners and scholars committed to enhancing the overall well-being and quality of life for older adults as they age in their homes.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Silver Drivers (MESH:C536644), vision and memory declines (MESH:D014786)

## Full text

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## References

42 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11347888/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11347888