Las Vegas Review-Journal

ELDERLY DRIVERS ARE TESTED FOR DEMENTIA

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over 80 years old, the rate was three times as high as for drivers under that age. The news media regularly feature grisly reports of deaths caused by older drivers, some of whom are later discovered to have Alzheimer’s disease.

Since 2009, all drivers 75 and older must submit to a test of their cognitive functionin­g when they renew their licenses, typically once every three years. Under a new law that took effect in 2017, those who score poorly are sent to a doctor for examinatio­n, and if they are found to have dementia, police can revoke their licenses.

Police have revoked just over 1,350 licenses fpr dementia diagnoses.

An additional 460,000 older drivers showed slight impairment of their cognitive functions, based on their performanc­e on the test, but were allowed to keep their licenses if they took a three-hour traffic safety course.

Many more, for a variety of medical or psychologi­cal reasons, have voluntaril­y decided they are no longer safe to drive and have given up their licenses. Police and local government­s, along with some businesses, encourage older drivers to surrender their licenses by offering incentives like restaurant coupons or discounts on buses and taxi rides. In the police station in the town of Gotsu, a poster showed an older man reclining on a porch surrounded by family members and the line: “Please consult with the station soon if you think something is wrong with your driving.”

Over the last five years, the number of drivers over 65 who voluntaril­y gave up their licenses across Japan more than tripled, to nearly 405,000 last year.

Advocates for the aging say that in rural areas, any measures urging the elderly to give up driving need to be balanced against the potential harm to their quality of life.

Unlike major urban areas like Tokyo or Kyoto, where public transit is plentiful and efficient, there are few options for getting around the countrysid­e. The train line that connected Shimane’s towns to neighborin­g Hiroshima prefecture ceased operating in April.

And unlike in the past, adult children no longer typically live with — or even near — their parents, leaving them to go grocery shopping or visit the doctor on their own.

“A lot of drivers in their late 70s or 80s need to drive to conduct their daily lives,” said Masabumi Tokoro, a professor of psychology at Rissho University in Tokyo who has studied such drivers. “It’s very difficult for them to give up their driver’s licenses. This is becoming a social problem, especially in rural areas.”

Those who favor imposing more restrictio­ns on elderly driv- ers say the danger of accidents outweighs any concerns about lifestyle. What’s more, they say, the new traffic law focuses too narrowly on cognitive abilities, when so many other factors, including loss of vision or deteriorat­ing reflexes and motor skills, could affect performanc­e.

“Isn’t it necessary to introduce a system in which drivers are compelled to surrender their driver’s licenses in cases where they lack various abilities?” read a January editorial in the newspaper Sankei. “It’s too late to regret once an accident is caused.”

Noboru Moriwaki, 90, said he had no imminent plans to give up driving.

He and his wife, Yukiko, 86, live up a curvy hill on the outskirts of Kawamoto. A few times a week, Moriwaki, a retired school principal, drives his 2002 stick-shift Toyota Corolla to the grocery store, bank or library. Once a month, he takes his wife to the hospital.

“If you can’t drive,” said Moriwaki, “you can’t get on with your life.” A history buff and avid gardener, Moriwaki said the cognitive tests that accompany driver’s license renewal were “easy.”

On a recent afternoon at a driving school in Hamada, one of 12 in Shimane that administer the cognitive assessment­s, officials demonstrat­ed a sample test. Drivers look at various pictures and then recall and describe them several minutes later. Those who get less than half correct are referred to doctors.

Specialist­s in dementia say that some people may be forced to give up licenses even when they are still capable of driving.

Heii Arai, a professor of psychiatry and chairman of the Juntendo Graduate School of Medicine said that instead of forcing older drivers to quit, the government should install infrastruc­ture such as guard rails along the sides of roads and near schools to help prevent accidents.

Some doctors say they must consider how integral driving can be to an elderly person’s emotional well-being.

“They feel as if they have no value after surrenderi­ng their licenses,” said Naoto Kamimura, a psychiatri­st and lecturer at Kochi University.

 ?? LOULOU D’AKI / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Noboru Moriwaki, 90, who said he had no imminent plans to give up driving, stands in his garden in Kawamoto, Japan. Concern that drivers with dementia are causing accidents has prompted authoritie­s in Japan to urge older people to surrender their...
LOULOU D’AKI / THE NEW YORK TIMES Noboru Moriwaki, 90, who said he had no imminent plans to give up driving, stands in his garden in Kawamoto, Japan. Concern that drivers with dementia are causing accidents has prompted authoritie­s in Japan to urge older people to surrender their...

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