TY - JOUR AU - Keay Lisa AU - Ivers R. AU - Chevalier Anna AU - Clarke Elizabeth AU - Brown Julie AU - Coxon Kristy AU - Rogers Kris AB -

It has been consistently reported that women self-regulate their driving more than men. Volunteer drivers aged 75 years and older from the suburban outskirts of Sydney, Australia joined a longitudinal study in 2012-2014. GPS in-vehicle monitoring was used to objectively measure driving and surveys of driving patterns. The study included 343 drivers (203/343, 59% men) with an average age of 80 years. Our results revealed that men were 3.85 times more likely to report driving beyond their local shire during the past year (95% CI 2.03-5.72) and 1.81 times more likely to report that they do not avoid night driving (95% CI 1.21-3.22). In contrast sex was not predictive of any objective measure of driving during a one-week period of monitoring. These findings suggest that men and women report different self-regulation practices but that actual driving exposure is quite similar. These findings can inform strategies to promote safe mobility.

BT - Accid Anal Prev C1 - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29202324?dopt=Abstract DA - 51465471460 DO - 10.1016/j.aap.2017.11.011 J2 - Accid Anal Prev LA - eng N2 -

It has been consistently reported that women self-regulate their driving more than men. Volunteer drivers aged 75 years and older from the suburban outskirts of Sydney, Australia joined a longitudinal study in 2012-2014. GPS in-vehicle monitoring was used to objectively measure driving and surveys of driving patterns. The study included 343 drivers (203/343, 59% men) with an average age of 80 years. Our results revealed that men were 3.85 times more likely to report driving beyond their local shire during the past year (95% CI 2.03-5.72) and 1.81 times more likely to report that they do not avoid night driving (95% CI 1.21-3.22). In contrast sex was not predictive of any objective measure of driving during a one-week period of monitoring. These findings suggest that men and women report different self-regulation practices but that actual driving exposure is quite similar. These findings can inform strategies to promote safe mobility.

PY - 2018 SP - 155 EP - 160 T2 - Accid Anal Prev TI - Sex differences evident in self-reported but not objective measures of driving. VL - 111 SN - 1879-2057 ER -