Driving requires dividing your attention among many activities and being able to react quickly. Reaction time decreases with age. Although it may not be obvious in other activities, a delay in response time can be quite noticeable during unexpected driving situations.
A decline in vision and hearing reduces the information that a person has when they need to respond or react with the speed and good judgment that traffic calls for.
Also, illnesses can affect driving abilities as people age. These include heart, lung, nervous system, and mental health conditions.
Medicines can also decrease alertness, attention, concentration, and reaction time. Review your medicines with your doctor. Ask if any changes should be made, or if you should not take certain medicines while driving.
Symptoms of decreased reaction time and attention include the following:
- You feel overwhelmed by all the signs, signals, road markings, pedestrians, and vehicles at intersections.
- Gaps in traffic are harder to judge. This makes it harder to turn left at intersections or to merge with traffic when turning right.
- You often get lost or become confused.
- You are slow to see cars coming out of driveways and side streets or to realize that another car has slowed or stopped ahead of you.
If you have these symptoms, you might try to limit your driving to familiar routes. Drive only during the day. Don't go out at rush hour, and avoid heavily traveled routes. Turn left at intersections that have a green arrow for left turns, or make several right turns so you won't have to turn left.