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Journal Article

Citation

Molnar FJ, Byszewski AM, Marshall SC, Man-Son-Hing M. Can. Fam. Physician 2005; 51: 372-379.

Affiliation

Institute of Aging, Canadian Institute of Health Research, Elizebeth-Bruyère Research Institute, Ottawa, ON.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, College of Family Physicians of Canada)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15794013

PMCID

PMC1472965

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To provide background for physicians'in-office assessment of medical fitness to drive, including legal risks and responsibilities. To review opinion-based approaches and current attempts to promote evidence-based strategies for this assessment. QUALITY OF EVIDENCE: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsyclNFO, Ageline, and Sociofile were searched from 1966 on for articles on health-related and medical aspects of fitness to drive. More than 1500 papers were reviewed to find practical approaches to, or guidelines for, assessing medical fitness to drive in primary care. Only level III evidence was found. No evidence-based approaches were found. MAIN MESSAGE: Three practical methods of assessment are discussed: the American Medical Association guidelines, SAFE DRIVE, and CanDRIVE. CONCLUSION: There is no evidence-based information to help physicians make decisions regarding medical fitness to drive. Current approaches are primarily opinion-based and are of unknown predictive value. Research initiatives, such as the CanDRIVE program of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, can provide empiric data that would allow us to move from opinion to evidence.

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