Senior Driving
Experts predict that 37 million Americans will be age 65 or older by the year 2020 and at least 90 percent of them will be licensed to drive. More than 196,000 seniors were involved in crashes in 2007, according to statistics from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). With the exception of teenagers, older Americans have the highest crash death rate per mile driven.
Traffic safety is vital for drivers of all ages, but older drivers experience physical changes that can affect driving ability including changes in vision, reaction time and flexibility. However, these skills deteriorate slowly over time, which is why it's important for drivers to regularly "self-check" their driving skills. The most important physical aspect of driving is seeing. In fact, 85% of driving is visual and 15% of driving is skill. It is proven that after age 40, eyesight deteriorates. A 60-year old driver requires ten times as much light to see as a 19 year old. Eyesight should be checked every two years, as opposed to relying on the test given by the Department of Motor Vehicles during license renewal. Senior drivers are generally smart drivers. They know their limitations, so they drive less, less at night and less in inclement weather. However, senior drivers injure more easily than younger drivers. The problem is not that senior drivers crash more but that they are more likely to die from injuries or get hurt. In fact:
- Seniors kill fewer motorists and pedestrians than drivers of any other age group
- Seniors have the lowest crash involvement rates per licensed driver
- Seniors have the lowest rate of crash involvement rates involving alcohol impairment
- Seniors have the highest rates of seat belt use among adults
Other AAA resources available to help seniors gauge their ability to drive safely:
Top Ten Driving Tips For Seniors:
As we age, our abilities critical to safe driving diminishes. Learn ten very important tips that could make you a safer driver. Although a number of research efforts are under way to develop screening tests, to date there is no valid test to fairly identify the at-risk driver. Based on that fact, the Foundation for Safety & Education does not support mandatory driver testing based solely on age.
Roadwise Review
Check your driving abilities conveniently and confidentially from the privacy of your own home. Roadwise Review, available on CD-ROM is a scientifically validated screening tool developed by AAA and noted transportation safety researchers. Find out how to measure the eight functional abilities shown to be the strongest predictors of crash risk among older drivers.
Drive Safe. DriveSharp.
DriveSharp is built on a patented technology that was designed and tested by a global team of more than 50 scientists. The program’s effectiveness has been clinically proven in study after study.
- Cut your risk of a car crash by up to 50%
- Increase useful field of view by up to 200%
- React faster to dangers - reduce stopping distance by up to 22 feet at 55 mph
- Drive with greater confidence at night, in congested traffic, and in new places