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Rose, I would encourage you to get a copy of your dad's insurance policy. I just read my renewal and my insurance company specifically states that accidents caused by a covered person that has had an injury or diagnosis that affects their mental capacity WILL NOT BE COVERED, unless their doctor provides a written note stating they were completely safe to drive.

If his insurance states anything similar, he could be sued for everything he owns.

I am thinking mentally impaired seniors are causing far to many accidents and the insurance companies are doing everything they legally can to put a stop to the claims.

Remember DWI doesn't mean Driving while intoxicated it means Driving while impaired.
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JoAnn29 Aug 2022
Then the powers that be need to be aware of this clause in insurance policies. Not all doctors want to be the "bad guy". As soon as a person has a formal diagnosis of Dementia, their license should be revoked or at least limited, like said, to daylight and local driving only. They should be tested by DMV ever 3 months or so.
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I didn’t want to deal with Mom’s anger and her ability to cut people out of relationship with her if they did something she didnt like. However, I could not live with myself if I didn’t put a stop to Moms driving and if she hurt or killed herself or someone else. After writing to the state and telling them the many changes I saw in Mom and a MCD (mild cognitive decline) diagnosis that the doctor did not report, she received revocation from the state.

Putting through the paperwork to stop her driving has changed our relationship, but so has her diagnosis 2+ years ago. She wont see a doc for anything now, as her paranoia, a byproduct of this disease, makes her think I will throw her in a nursing home. We have no relationship as she doesn’t trust me, but so be it. I cannot control that she wants no part of me, but I am so at peace knowing I did the right thing, possibly saving lives.

If your dad confronts you, tell him you did the responsible and correct thing to assist him, and potentially other drivers.

I hope you can come to some peace on this.
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In my situation, Dad had macular degeneration for years but the doctor put the burden on us; said he wouldn't revoke until we gave the ok. Before that could happen, Dad had a brain tumor and surgery to remove it. He became erratic and unpredictable, we seized the opportunity and gave the green light. I had been very frank with Dad and discussed several times that he was not going to be able to drive. The doc finally gave Dad the paperwork, who then went to the DMV with it so he could turn in the licence for a photo id. Dad gave them a sob story and ended up getting his licence back! I had to demand he give it to me, so that I could turn it in. It was the ugliest scene ever. After I did turn it in and he did get a photo id, he still tried to drive. Mom is the enabler, and would let him have his way to avoid further conflict. In the end, we disabled and later sold his car. I won't say he was "fine" with it, but we all knew it was just another hurdle to cross.
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I not sure why he would know u were the only one to have told the DMV? Don't try to make a living through crime...
It wouldn't work for u.....
Really I'm not even sure how u made it through ur teen years.
I don't know how they found out...
Doc must have told them. The computers r so tied together now, maybe when the doc puts in the medical chart u shouldn't drive it goes directly to the DMV... Idk know how the DMV found out...
U did not have nearly as much fun as u should have had in your teen years.
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This post is almost 3 months old and the OP has not returned.

Baily, really don't understand your reply. When my grandson's Doctor reported him, I assume it was a letter with back up showing that because of epileptic seizures he could no longer drive. It took DMV 2 months to send my grandson a letter asking him to send his licence to them. To get it reinstated, he had to prove to DMV he has been seizure free for a year.
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Stop the guilt trip. You absolutely did the right thing. Learn to manage your response to the situation. Guilt is a useless, destructive feeling and is a way many parents (mine included) controlled their children and it just gets embedded in our psyche. At the end of the day you did the right thing and can sleep well at night. Your actions may have saved a life. And I thank you that there is one less incompetent driver on the road.
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It is Not Disbelief That is Dangerous to Our Society; It is Belief. — George Bernard Shaw

Seniors and their right to drive, or is it a privilege? This topic, and how to get them to move into AL are the biggies.

During a visit to mom several years ago, the neighbor pulled me to the side and informed that mom was having problems getting the car out of the garage. She would ask the neighbor to get her car out the garage. This was happening more and more. When I called her doctor and informed him, I was told she can't drive and he would file the paper work to revoke her license. Then I took her car keys.

My mom was never a violent or a foul mouth person, but taking her keys I experience both in spades. I'm sure this may looked comical from a distance watching 85+ women throwing punch and string of words that would make a long shore man blushed. Since the Police dept is a few blocks away, she turned me into the Police for stealing her keys. During this discussion, the doctor was called and clarified the situation. The police came out we a compromise that mom agree to but does not remember. Yes she has advance dementia.

That night I heard her raged how GREAT a driver she was. One of the best drivers in town, and the doctor had not right to do this. She called the doctor's office many time, but the story was the same. I tried to explain the risks and dangers of her driving. She was greater risk than a 16 year driver. She knew that wasn't true, because she was a GREAT driver. She didn't care if she did hit someone with the car. Lose the house in a law suit, etc. Beside that would not happen because she is a Great driver.

There was a lot more to story. She did drive the car for awhile on revoke license. She called up a lock Smith for a new key. She had a mechanic that would make house calls when the car would not start.

So where are we now? She is not driving. Mechanic doesn't show up. She now HATES her doctor for destroying her life, but she can walk to all the places she wants to go. I keep offering her to take her to the DMV to see about getting, but she declines.

Driving is one of the major steps becoming independence. Losing that independence can feel like a jail cell.

Just a couple of closing things to think about. Just because the drive license has been revoke. The senior still owns the car. If you take, the car can be report stolen and now you are the criminal. BTW don't steal their driver license. It is there property.
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