Dad turns 93 Saturday and can barely walk, but somehow he manages to get to his car and drive somewhere almost every day. He is sharp as a tack but he's hard of hearing and has so many health issues it is nuts that he is still driving. The assisted living facility he lives in doesn't object which surprises me. The DMV renewed his license without so much as an eye test. We want to just take the keys but his DR says he will get so depressed that would be the end. We need some support! Any ideas how we can make it easier for him to adjust to not driving?
Find a new MD.
How do you substantiate his inability to drive when residential facility and MD do not object.
A couple of her main points:
(1) You / family be the 'GOOD GUY' -- supportive, understanding, empathic person. Let Dad know how frustrating and disappointing this feels to him. Make the MD or authorities be the 'BAD GUY.'
(2) Talk to your Dad in a way he feels empowered; make him part of the decision making (watch how she does this on the video).
(3) Teepa does talk about MDs who don't want to get involved (I believe she mentions liability)
* * *
Is an excellent video to watch no matter what the situation is re elders & driving.
Me: It is not worth the worrying. It is not worth the lives, lawsuit, injuries.. DAD'S included...
IT'S JUST NOT WORTH IT.. PERIOD.
When was the last time you drove with Dad? Seriously... Are you able to hang in there without winching? Or scringing ? or reacting to a role away stop, or barely hitting the brakes or gas pedal or pedestrian, or traffic post?
Yup, my brother, The Fireman, told me to take mom's car away... He did'nt want ma to go into court for a lawsuit that she didn't cause..... plus the thought of losing everything.
Is the doctor willing to pay all damages to the other party cuz he didn't want to see your dad DEPRESSED? I DON'T THINK SO........If you are not sure if the doctor thinks.. ASK THE DOCTOR DIRECTLY..."doc, do you think dad's depression or lack of depression is more important than the lives of people around a person whose reactions may be slower due to his age? hmmm?
DO YOURSELVES A FAVOR: SCHEDULE A DMV DRIVING TEST FOR DAD WHERE HE HAS TO GET BEHIND THE WHEEL WITH AN OFFICIAL... And then lose the keys and the car.... Just remember more accidents occur within the first (5) miles from home.. Or, is that number closer to one or two miles from home? I forget... either way, I would rather see my ma and pa depressed than seeing them hit the gas instead of the brake.... This happened in Santa Monica, CA a number years ago.. The poor old man didn't know what happened, and panicked and kept driving over people....a lot of people got hurt.
Then a company came in and sold their posts that are installed in most public places... they stop the vehicles basically immediately... They don't bend, they block vehicles from moving forward...I am sure more than one company makes these, but they work. Well, all I know posts are being placed in more public areas than before... good thing...
Think about it.. Take the doctor's opinion or anyone else's, mine included, and put it on the shelf for now... What matters most to your family? I think the answer will be: Safety for everyone....
My mom is too forgetful and distracted to drive. We let the car battery die and it sits in her driveway. Now the tags have expired. She either has no idea how or has her own reservations about driving.. but the car hasn’t moved. But man does she ever complain about not driving. Of course we offer to take her wherever she wants.. but she’s mad and sad about not driving. But we simply will not risk her or another persons injury by letting her drive. It’s just not that important, and not worth the risk.
Good luck.
Dad is only 71 but he has late stage Parkinson's Disease along with a host of other medical issues. If you met him you'd think he was in his 90's. My mother passed about 7 years ago and he lives with me full time.
We deal with this by only having one car, and I offer to drive him anywhere we go and he doesn't object. Because of my new job, I need to purchase a truck before snow flies so I can plow my own driveway, so there will be a second registered vehicle on the property. I'm still brainstorming ideas for how to make that work.
Right now we haven't had "the talk," and for the most part he's OK with not driving. Every now and then when we're out of milk or something critical, he half-heartedly offers to do the errand, but I think he knows I won't go for that.
I have brought it up multiple times with his neurologist, who refuses to play the heavy and report it to DMV. That's extremely frustrating for me.
I don't think I have an answer for you, but I wanted to let you know that this is a difficult topic and many people can empathize.
He did have problems driving us, primarily because he would be distracted, by us. He would talk, wave his hands, and point to landmarks, and tell stories. While driving. I told him, if you want to drive, you have to concentrate on driving.
Anyway he enrolled in a program at the Veterans Admin. “Driving rehab”. They taught him and tested him. He passed their test!
A couple of years later he quit driving voluntarily after he had a stroke.
Before you take further action:
- have you inspected his car for signs of newer bumps, scratches and scrapes?
- do you know for a fact that he is taking all his required medication or sticking to a medically required diet (e.g. diabetes) faithfully?
- is he willing to get his hearing checked as a condition to drive during the day?
- does he have hearing aids but doesn't wear them?
- does he drive at night?
- does he go far?
- is he flexible enough to turn his head to check blind spots?
- does he stay in his lane?
Also, reaction time is a critical skill + this diminishes with age.
I had concerns about my 93-yr old aunt in FL driving when I visited & saw her car looked like it had been in a pinball machine and she said she couldn't remember where any of the damage came from. She was totally resistant to not driving so I started a strategy to make it less necessary.
- I asked local relatives, friends and neighbors to take her to scheduled appointments (like medical, hair, church) and I gave them money on the sly to take her out to lunch during that trip so that it was also a social event that she looked forward to.
- I had groceries delivered to her doorstep
- I eventually hired Visiting Angels to provide a companion who came several days a week to hang out with her and take her places. She loves her companion. Her car is still in her garage and keys still on the wall and I think she has forgotten how to drive or that she ever did (she has some dementia and short-term cognitive decline now at age 97).
- As I was employing this strategy I also wrote an anonymous letter to the FL DMV (along with her ID info, name/address/license # ) and made a detailed case as to why she should be called in for an in-person test. She didn't pass the eye exam, as it turned out. And she never knew I was the one who contacted the state. You should do this right away with your dad.
A sad driving story:
I had an aged uncle and his wife (both in their late 80's) who were very vital and still showing up part time to work in the large plumbing contractor company they had started. He was driving with her during the late afternoon and had a "senior moment" and went through a red light. They were T-boned by another car and she was killed instantly (as was their dog who was in her lap). Thankfully, the other victims were not seriously hurt, nor was my uncle. My aunt had survived ovarian cancer and a rare heart illness. Her death sent my uncle into an untreatable depression, caused dementia to set in rapidly and he died within 2 years of the incident. My uncle was mentally very sharp, but seniors can become fatigued earlier in the day, or have lapses of judgement and attention that we may not pick up on in casual contact with them. It is a tricky grey area and this is why "transitioning out of driving" may be the best path.
Other strategies:
- you say your dad keeps the keys in his pocket. If you are convinced he is an immediate concern, you can remove some part of his engine (like his distributor cap or unplug his battery). With my mom-in-law I asked to borrow her van to move something then drove it to my house and parked it there and told her it broke down and was "in the shop".
- can you locate his other set of keys?
- help him look at the financial aspect: the cost of having & maintaining a car, the gas, the insurance, the tabs, etc. This may be eye-opening for him.
Offer to occasionally drive your dad places and make it a lunch/dinner date. He'll like that a lot. Then you can discuss it during a less stressful moment.
Good luck!
She had no peripheral vision, ran over curbs, didn’t see others running red lights, didn’t see stop signs. She would veer into other lanes and oncoming traffic, not yield to others, she couldn’t see, or she didn’t want to wait, or speed up to get there 1st. Older peoples reflexes deminish, reasoning is almost gone.
And you are worried about depression if they can’t drive?? What about the depression they have after they kill someone? Or themselves with your grandchildren in the car? What about the parents depression after he kills their child playing in their yard, Or in a parking lot? If you, or more than a couple people see what is happening, and they tell him what is going on and he still doesn’t give up “his keys” that right there tells you he is not of sound mind and can’t make good decisions.
Step up people. My gosh, if reasoning does not work, take action.
You have done all you can, you are not responsible for his actions. Let it go and keep your eyes open. If he is sharp as a tack he will know when it's time to stop driving.
I have an 89 year old friend that drives, even on the freeways. She knows that she has slower reflexes than she used to and she makes adjustments to accommodate them. I think all the texters are far more dangerous than our senior population. That proof is in the statistics.
cant you take him to be tested and if he fails they will not renew license. The man should not be in the road
It came down to, I couldn’t live with myself if there was a fatality because I let her talk me out of it. Some may think it was a selfish decision on my part, but the risk was too great.
And by the way, she is, and never has been, one to stay home. I run her, until recently due to medical problems, everywhere. I have taken her on several vacations. Grocery shopping, card club, visiting friends, and she wants to go out to eat at least once a week for lunch.
My advice to you. Do what YOU think is the right thing to do. If you spend time with him, and you feel he is a danger on the road, take the keys. The Doctor will not help. Nor the DMV, safety classes, 😂 (she didn’t need to go because everyone told her she was a good driver). I put her thru a driving course, and it was step by step driving around the block in a quiet neighborhood, and he passed her🤬
Their hearing, reflexes, quick decisions, peripheral vision greatly diminishes with age. Do what YOU think is best and if anyone questions you as to “how could you do this to him”, YOU know best and you made a decision to keep him safe. I wish you luck and peace, with your decision.
Of course he'll be mad but as a good child its time to step up. It's hard to change rolls from child to decision maker for parents. But it must be done. You can do it.
As for Dial-A-Ride and Senior Buses, you sometimes have to sit for an hour or more while you wait for them. I see handicapped people at my gym waiting and waiting for an hour or more for their transportation. The same at the grocery store.
"There is a subscription service, ArriveRides(dot)com, where folks can call on any kind of phone (even an old-school landline), and they will arrange for an Uber/Lyft ride. An account does need to be set up first. After that, it's similar to calling a taxi."
Like you, I've met folks who never used public transportation, even taxis, trains, or buses.
Best wishes to your husband in any dealings with his family.
My FIL has vascular dementia. I always inspected his car to make sure there were no new dents. He said he could drive perfectly fine but his reaction and mental processing time with all other decision making events was slowing. So I really doubted that he was all that capable. I went so far as to have a professional driving evaluation take him out and that guy said he could drive fine. But again, no car stopped suddenly in front of him, no child ran out in the street and no one suddenly veered into his lane. Could a younger person have had an accident under those circumstances. Of course, but my FIL was going to be slower in comparison. I was still on a campaign to get him to stop driving. He was driving with cataracts and his vision deteriorated to where he was legally blind but while he said that he could not see and knew he would not pass a driving test if I took him for one, he felt that since he had still had a valid license, he could STILL drive. Just really crazy thinking. In this case, the surgeon said he could not drive until the surgery. By the time he had the one eye done and could have driven, his license had expired. He did not drive again and we sold his car. I had been working on him gradually anyway but I do thank God that he handed out this cataract at the right time. I did plan to contact the DMV if he had tried to get a test and drive again. Or just plain take his keys. I will say that 2 months later, my FIL told me that I was right about his ability to drive and he should have stopped sooner.
We took my mother's keys; she has dementia and I told her if she promised to only kill herself, she could drive. needless to say, she never got her keys back.
I am 66 years old. I drive. My husband is 69; he drives. So I get it. We don't want to deal with angry elderly family members. Technically, legally, it might not be our problem unless we let them drive when we know their license is revoked. But really, the thought they could kill a child is horrifying and we really need to make sure this does not happen.
* Take a part out of the car so it doesn't work.
* Get MD to be 'the bad guy' and get an official document / letter that is sent to DMV and ALF where Dad resides. WRITE to the CEO of his MD practice or report this MD. Would the medical facility/MD/CEO prefer that others get killed crossing the street?
- Write a letter to your local paper mentioning the name(s) of the MD who say this.
- Of course he'll get DEPRESSED. This is what happens as cognitive and health declines and a person loses their independent. What is wrong with this MD???
- GET ANOTHER MD.
- Contact Michael Finney (in San Francisco Area, KGO radio and TV) and ask them to intervene. You might also have a consumer advocate where you live who is a public personality (TV show or radio).
* Read Teepa Snow's website and a specific webinar about this issue. You want to make another the 'bad guy' and support how your dad feels about the situation. You don't want to be the target of doing something like this to him.
* If your dad might be inclined to call the police (as some do), you notify them and let them know of the situation so they can be on alert.
* Notify your Dad's insurance company and let them know how you feel. If they are on alert and esp with an official letter sent to them - if they take away Dad's insurance, you are not the bad guy. If they don't, the insurance company might be liable if your dad injures - or kills - someone while driving. I don't know, but if I were an insurance company, I would not want to be in this position.
* Sounds like first step is getting an MD's official notification. I'd go over your MD's head and report him. If s/he works alone, I would contact the Medical Board.
YOU are trying to take responsibility before something awful might happen. Others needs to do the same. Gena.