| Literature DB >> 30321219 |
Carol Sinnott1,2, Tony Foley2, Justin Forsyth2, Kathleen McLoughlin2, Linda Horgan3, Colin P Bradley2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To review the empirical evidence on approaches used by Primary Care Physicians (PCPs) in fitness to drive (FtD) consultations with people living with cognitive impairment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30321219 PMCID: PMC6188864 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Included Studies | Excluded Studies |
|---|---|
| Primary research (i.e. has generated empirical evidence). | Not primary studies (e.g. book reviews, editorials, opinion pieces, expert advice) or not reporting primary empirical findings. |
Fig 1Flow diagram of systematic scoping review.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Study | Aim | Study Design | Country | Participants | Sample Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| To understand the importance of driving in the lives of older adults with dementia | Cross-sectional | America | People with dementia (n = 75) and collateral sources familiar with their driving (n = 75) | n = 150 | |
| To examine the effect of the Driving and Dementia Toolkit on physician knowledge and confidence gained in undertaking an office assessment of driving skills | Pre/post questionnaires | Canada | Family physicians | n = 145 | |
| To evaluate how a self-administered decision aid contributed to decision making about driving retirement by individuals living with dementia | Pre/post questionnaires | Australia | Drivers with dementia | n = 12 | |
| To establish the general practice experience of assessing patients with cognitive impairment for driving fitness, examine the GPs attitude to this role, and investigate what factors influence GPs in this decision-making process | Cross-sectional survey | Ireland | General Practitioners | n = 125 | |
| To examine perceptions of family physicians regarding their role of monitoring seniors’ driving and understand their perspective on both the informal and legislated aspects of their role | Qualitative focus groups | Canada | Family physicians | n = 20 | |
| To assess a curriculum that trains health professionals to increase their awareness, screening, management, | Pre/post questionnaires | America | Healthcare professionals including General Practitioners, Occupational Therapists. Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants | n = 1202 | |
| To assess how GPs in Canterbury determine the driving ability of their older patients with cognitive impairments | Cross-sectional survey | New Zealand | General Practitioners | n = 514 | |
| To explore perceived roles and attitudes towards the provision of dementia care from the perspectives of family physicians and specialists | Qualitative interviews | Canada | Family physicians (n = 6) and hospital specialists (n = 6) | n = 12 | |
| To investigate the | Qualitative interviews | Australia | People with suspected cognitive impairment | n = 7 | |
| To explore GP perspectives regarding assessing fitness to drive in older and functionally impaired patients | Qualitative interviews and one focus group | Australia | General Practitioners | n = 13 | |
| To investigate the attitudes of General Practitioners to older drivers on the New South Wales Central Coast. | Cross-sectional survey | Australia | General Practitioners | n = 173 | |
| To develop and evaluate a multimedia | Pre/post questionnaires at 4 time points | America | Licensed health professionals | n = 190 | |
| To assess perceived barriers to addressing driving safety in dementia among Nova Scotian primary care physicians and to determine whether these barriers differ between urban and rural physicians or according to years of practice | Cross-sectional survey | Canada | Primary Care Physicians | n = 134 | |
| To assess the impact of a provincial Web-based resource ( | Pre/post questionnaires | Canada | Primary Care Physicians | n = 134 | |
| To examine beliefs and responses to the issue of driving and Alzheimer’s Dementia among key stakeholder groups, including views on the circumstances that either allow persons with dementia to continue driving or prompt them to retire, beliefs regarding the identification and management of unsafe drivers with AD and the perceived barriers to and successful strategies for achieving driving cessation when appropriate | Qualitative focus groups | America | General Practitioners (n = 8); Drivers with very mild to mild cognitive impairment (n = 9); Former drivers with very mild to mild cognitive impairment (n = 5); Family caregivers of drivers (n = 9); Family caregivers of former drivers (n = 5); Advocates (n = 10); Non Physician Healthcare Staff (n = 8); Transport and law enforcement professionals (n = 8); Geriatricians and Neurologists (n = 6) | n = 68 | |
| To determine whether a practice redesign intervention coupled with referral to local Alzheimer's Association chapters can improve the quality of dementia care | Pre/post medical intervention audits | America | Two community-based physician practices and patients aged 75+ with dementia. | N = 5 | |
| To investigate the attitudes, knowledge, | Cross-sectional survey | Australia | General Practitioners | n = 1,000 (approx) | |
| To investigate individual differences in | Cross-sectional survey | Australia | General Practitioners | n = 204 |
Fig 2Reasons for PCP discomfort in consultations on driving in patients with cognitive impairment.
Description of interventions.
| The Driving and Dementia Toolkit | The toolkit significantly improved PCPs self-reported knowledge and confidence for assessing driving capacity in people with dementia in primary care by: | Questions to ask patients | |
| The Driving With Dementia Decision Aid (DDDA) to guide patients through: | The DDDA improved patients’ knowledge and satisfaction with decisions regarding driving retirement by | Move focus away from assessment of FtD, to focus instead on facilitating planning for driving retirement with patients recently diagnosed with dementia. | |
| One hour seminar on age-related driving impairments including: | The training programme increased: | Promote general health and ensure optimal medication use to best support on-going driving (i.e. vision, range of motion, use lowest effective dose of medications etc.) | |
| Two hour multimedia workshop covering | The workshop was associated with | Where impairment is very mild, advise the person and family that driving cessation will be required eventually. Follow up every 6–12 months. | |
| Launch of a web-based campaign and resource ( | After the web-resource was launched participants were | Increasing familiarity with local resources for driving assessment and supports for patients and caregivers can facilitate discussions about driving. | |
| ACOVE-2 intervention: | This intervention led to more patients with dementia being referred to local Alzheimer's Association chapters. Referred patients had higher quality scores (65% versus 41%) and better counselling about planning for driving cessation (50% versus 14%). | Consider referral of all patients with dementia to local Alzheimer Associations for provision of support and information regarding driving cessation. |