Anonymous wrote:There have been tremendous recent advances in auto safety with features such as automatic emergency braking, lane departure warning, blind spot monitoring and adaptive cruise control. These features can probably delay by a few years the age at which the elderly should stop driving.
Of course, time marches on for all of us, and eventually the elderly should stop driving.
Anonymous wrote:Also driving restrictions for the elderly need not necessarily be abrupt. Two useful first steps are to stop driving at night and to stop driving on highways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m 66. Healthy and only need readers. When my doctor advises I quit driving, or my kids notice a decline, I will give them my car. However, as a widow, I don’t feel comfortable with Lyft or Uber, so I’ll stick to more deliveries. I’m not expecting my kids to haul me around.
Again…you’re just too old for when Uber and Lyft came about. Plenty of single women take Ubers and Lyfts…when Waymo is in your area then you won’t have to worry about drivers either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We try, OP. My dad lives in a European capital that has excellent public transportation. He’s 88 and still *needs* his car to play golf.
No he doesn't. You simply take the keys away, or have their doctor send a note to revoke their DL.
So thankful my parents happily gave up their final car by age 82/83.
But I would have taken the keys away if they hadn't within a few years after that
You're either delusional, or intentionally trying to stir things up.
"Simply taking the keys away" from someone is theft. You think there aren't elderly people who will call the police on their own kids?
Guess I still have a healthy relationship with my parents. So we'd have a discussion. But if needed I'd have their doctor pull their DL, if they were no longer rational
You can’t just direct your parents’ doctor to do things.
Anonymous wrote:There have been tremendous recent advances in auto safety with features such as automatic emergency braking, lane departure warning, blind spot monitoring and adaptive cruise control. These features can probably delay by a few years the age at which the elderly should stop driving.
Of course, time marches on for all of us, and eventually the elderly should stop driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We try, OP. My dad lives in a European capital that has excellent public transportation. He’s 88 and still *needs* his car to play golf.
No he doesn't. You simply take the keys away, or have their doctor send a note to revoke their DL.
So thankful my parents happily gave up their final car by age 82/83.
But I would have taken the keys away if they hadn't within a few years after that
You're either delusional, or intentionally trying to stir things up.
"Simply taking the keys away" from someone is theft. You think there aren't elderly people who will call the police on their own kids?
Guess I still have a healthy relationship with my parents. So we'd have a discussion. But if needed I'd have their doctor pull their DL, if they were no longer rational
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We try, OP. My dad lives in a European capital that has excellent public transportation. He’s 88 and still *needs* his car to play golf.
No he doesn't. You simply take the keys away, or have their doctor send a note to revoke their DL.
So thankful my parents happily gave up their final car by age 82/83.
But I would have taken the keys away if they hadn't within a few years after that
You're either delusional, or intentionally trying to stir things up.
"Simply taking the keys away" from someone is theft. You think there aren't elderly people who will call the police on their own kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But teens have to take a test to get a license - so if you have a teen driver, he or she very recently has proven (as much as is required which granted is not much!) that he or she is a competent driver.
Someone above said her 98 year old grandmother had her license auto renewed - that likely means that person hasn’t had their driving competency checked in 82 years?!
LOL, not in Iowa you don't. You turn 16, show up at the DMV and they give you a DL. Also, at 14.5 you can get a school permit and drive, ALONE, to and from work and school
Anonymous wrote:I’m 66. Healthy and only need readers. When my doctor advises I quit driving, or my kids notice a decline, I will give them my car. However, as a widow, I don’t feel comfortable with Lyft or Uber, so I’ll stick to more deliveries. I’m not expecting my kids to haul me around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We try, OP. My dad lives in a European capital that has excellent public transportation. He’s 88 and still *needs* his car to play golf.
No he doesn't. You simply take the keys away, or have their doctor send a note to revoke their DL.
So thankful my parents happily gave up their final car by age 82/83.
But I would have taken the keys away if they hadn't within a few years after that