4.5 Article

Predicting On-Road Driving Skills, Fitness to Drive, and Prospective Accident Risk in Older Drivers and Drivers with Mild Cognitive Impairment: The Importance of Non-Cognitive Risk Factors

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
Volume 79, Issue 1, Pages 401-414

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-200943

Keywords

Accident risk; driving skills; fitness to drive; mild cognitive impairment; older drivers; risk factors

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The combination of cognitive and non-cognitive risk factors can accurately predict on-road driving performance and prospective accident risk in healthy older drivers and drivers with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Non-cognitive risk factors play an important role in improving prediction accuracy.
Background: On-road driving behavior can be impaired in older drivers and particularly in drivers with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Objective: To determine whether cognitive and non-cognitive risk factors for driving safety may allow an accurate and economic prediction of on-road driving skills, fitness to drive, and prospective accident risk in healthy older drivers and drivers with MCI, we examined a representative combined sample of older drivers with and without MCI (N = 74) in an observational on-road study. In particular, we examined whether non-cognitive risk factors improve predictive accuracy provided by cognitive factors alone. Methods: Multiple and logistic hierarchical regression analyses were utilized to predict different driving outcomes. In all regression models, we included cognitive predictors alone in a first step and added non-cognitive predictors in a second step. Results: Results revealed that the combination of cognitive and non-cognitive risk factors significantly predicted driving skills (R(2)adjusted = 0.30) and fitness to drive (81.2% accuracy) as well as the number (R(2)adjusted = 0.21) and occurrence (88.3% accuracy) of prospective minor at-fault accidents within the next 12 months. In all analyses, the inclusion of non-cognitive risk factors led to a significant increase of explained variance in the different outcome variables. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that a combination of the most robust cognitive and non-cognitive risk factors may allow an economic and accurate prediction of on-road driving performance and prospective accident risk in healthy older drivers and drivers with MCI. Therefore, non-cognitive risk factors appear to play an important role.

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