The influence of age-related health difficulties and attitudes toward driving on driving self-regulation in the baby boomer and older adult generations

•For men, driving self-regulation is associated with poor vision and cognition.•For women, driving self-regulation is associated with attitudes toward driving.•Driving confidence is uniquely associated with self-regulation in men and women.•Attitudes toward driving are the same for baby boomer and o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Accident analysis and prevention 2017-05, Vol.102, p.12-22
Hauptverfasser: Conlon, Elizabeth G., Rahaley, Nicole, Davis, Jessica
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•For men, driving self-regulation is associated with poor vision and cognition.•For women, driving self-regulation is associated with attitudes toward driving.•Driving confidence is uniquely associated with self-regulation in men and women.•Attitudes toward driving are the same for baby boomer and older women. Our study aimed to determine how age- and disease-related difficulties were associated with attitudes and beliefs about driving self-regulation in men and women in the baby boomer and older generations. Three hundred and ninety-nine men (n=204) and women (n=195) aged between 48 and 91 years participated in a cross-sectional study of Australian drivers. Demographic characteristics and measures of driving confidence, driving difficulty and driving self-regulation; perceptions of visual, physical and cognitive capacity; and attitudes and beliefs about driving were obtained. Driving self-regulation in men and women was explained by different mechanisms. For men, self-report of visual and cognitive difficulties and poor driving confidence predicted driving self-regulation. For women, negative attitudes toward driving mediated the associations found between health-related difficulties and driving self-regulation. Barriers to driving self-regulation were not associated with the driving self-regulatory practices of men or women. Regardless of generation, women reported poorer driving confidence, greater driving difficulty and more driving self-regulation than men. We concluded that age- and disease-related difficulties are related to increasing driving self-regulation in mature men and women. These results indicate that different pathways are needed in models of driving self-regulation for men and women regardless of generational cohort.
ISSN:0001-4575
1879-2057
DOI:10.1016/j.aap.2017.02.010