| Literature DB >> 21179219 |
Alain M Bron1, Ananth C Viswanathan, Ulrich Thelen, Renato de Natale, Antonio Ferreras, Jens Gundgaard, Gail Schwartz, Patricia Buchholz.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Low vision that causes forfeiture of driver's licenses and collection of disability pension benefits can lead to negative psychosocial and economic consequences. The purpose of this study was to review the requirements for holding a driver's license and rules for obtaining a disability pension due to low vision. Results highlight the possibility of using a milestone approach to describe progressive eye disease.Entities:
Keywords: driver’s license requirements; glaucoma; health outcomes; progressive eye disease
Year: 2010 PMID: 21179219 PMCID: PMC2999549 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S15359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Driver’s license requirements in Europe
| Country | Visual acuity | Visual field | Monocular vision | Other characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EU | 0.5 both eyes and with corrective lenses | No less than 120° | VA ≥0.6 if monocular vision | Exceptions can be made by medical opinion |
| UK | Number plate test (≈6/10 to 6/15) | At least 120° horizontally (no significant loss within central 20°) | Monocular vision if normal visual field | License must be revoked if standards not met (exceptions possible under EU standards) |
| Germany | Corrected VA not below 0.5 in the best eye, 0.2 in the worse eye | At least 120° horizontally (perfect within 30°) | If monocular or worse eye below 0.2: best eye at least 0.6 VA | |
| France | Binocular acuity not lower than 0.5 | Horizontal: 60° right and left; vertical: 30° above and below | If monocular or worse eye below 0.1: best eye at least 0.6 VA | Night vision necessary; can be exceptions for restricted daytime licenses |
| Spain | Best-corrected VA of at least 0.5 | Visual field has to be normal | Monocular vision not allowed; exceptions if at least 0.6 VA | Restrictions can be determined by medical experts |
| Italy | Best-corrected binocular VA at least 1 | Normal field of vision (such as 120°) | Worse-seeing eye at least 0.2 | Sufficient chromatic sense and nocturnal vision |
Note: 0.4 to 0.6 in decimal fraction.
Abbreviations: VA, visual acuity; EU, European Union.
Driver’s license requirements in the US
| State | Visual acuity | Visual field | Monocular vision | Other characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All states | Most states: 20/40 (one or both eyes) | Some states: none; most states: 110° to 140° | 20/40 to 20/100 | Most states allow for restrictive licenses |
| California | 20/40 with or without corrective lenses | No visual field requirements | Tested for both eyes together and for each eye separately | A vision specialist can determine ability to drive |
| New York | 20/40 vision in at least one eye with or without corrective lenses | If VA between 20/40 and 20/70 | A vision specialist can determine restrictions | |
| Iowa | At least 20/40 vision in at least one eye, with or without corrective lenses | 140° or better | 20/40–20/50 |
Notes: Decimal fraction equivalent: 20/40 = 0.5;
20/70 = 0.3;
20/100 = 0.2;
20/50 = 0.4.
Abbreviation: VA, visual acuity.
Eligibility for disability pension benefits
| Country | Partially sighted | Blind |
|---|---|---|
| UK | VA of 3/60 to 6/60 with a full field, or 6/24 with field contraction, aphakia, or opacities blocking vision | VA of 3/60 or 1/18, or 6/30 to 3/60 with a very restricted visual field, or 6/18 or better with marked contraction of visual field |
| Germany | Central BCVA of 1/50 in the better eye | |
| France | VA <3/10 and >1/20 | Central vision ≤1/20 of one eye, and VA of the fellow eye below 1/20, with peripheral visual field deficiency when the visual fields do not exceed 20° in the largest area |
| Spain | 1/10 on a Wecker scale, visual field reduced to 10° or less | N/A |
| Italy | 1/20 or lower for both eyes | Absolute blindness |
| US | BCVA of 20/200 in the better eye, or limitations in the fields of vision no greater than 20° | N/A |
Abbreviations: VA, visual acuity; BCVA, best-corrected visual acuity; N/A, not applicable.
Figure 1Example of how revocation of the driver’s license and entitlement to disability pensions could be considered milestones. The downward-sloping line represents progression of visual impairment over time.
Figure 2Driver’s license forfeiture and entitlement to disability pensions can be used as endpoints in clinical trials. The results may be reported as time saved due to delaying milestones.