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The Refreshing Older Adults' Driving Skills (ROADSkills) Program

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Drive
Interventions
Behavioral: Healthy Aging
Behavioral: ROADskills program
Registration Number
NCT05450159
Lead Sponsor
McMaster University
Brief Summary

Drivers aged 65+ depend on their car(s) to get to the places and see the people that are important to them. Losing a license in later life has been linked to higher rates of loneliness, depression, and even admission to long-term care; a fact that is particularly relevant when considering the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. While drivers in this age group are among the safest on the road, they have one of the highest risks of collision when distance driven is considered and are more likely to be seriously injured or killed. Motor vehicle crashes and falls are the top causes of injury-related hospitalizations in seniors. Through a partnership with older adults, driving instructors, and health professionals, we developed the Refreshing Older Adult Driving Skills (ROADSkills) program. This program uses a Global Positioning System (GPS) device that can be placed in people's cars, which can track their real-world, everyday driving patterns, including speeding and hard braking, alongside video data of their behind-the-wheel behaviour. Using this data, a personalized video will be created using information captured by the device in the older driver's car. This study will determine if the older drivers who receive this video feedback perform better than those who do not receive such feedback. Because this is the first time a study will use this type of behavioural intervention, we are interested in hearing from older drivers about their experience of participating in the study. The findings will help us to design a larger, national study of the ROADSkills program in Canada.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria
  • Aged 65-79 to reduce co-intervention bias, as the Ministry of Transportation has a Senior Driver Renewal program that screens drivers aged 80 and older
  • Hold a valid driver's license
  • Owner and access to insured vehicle
  • Speak and understand English fluently
  • Visited an optometrist in last two years
  • if corrective lens are required for driving, prescriptions should be up-to-date
Exclusion Criteria
  • If participated in a recent Randomized Controlled Trial that examined the effectiveness of video-based intervention, will be excluded due to potential for bias
  • Known serious or terminal illness or presence of contraindications for driving
  • Performance on cognitive screening: 1) score of < 21 on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA; Nasreddine et al., 2005) 2) taking longer than 180 seconds or 3 or more errors on the Trail Making Test B (Bowie & Harvey, 2006).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Control groupHealthy AgingFour to six weeks after their first baseline visit, control group participants individually will watch a 30-minute (generic) video that describes the benefits and challenges of aging-in-place that discusses the importance of community mobility in later life. At the end of their session, participants will be given a government brochure on this topic.
Intervention groupROADskills programParticipants in the intervention group will watch their respective training video individually approximately four to six weeks after their baseline visit. Each training video will be 20-25 minutes in length where they will receive voice-over feedback on their driving from a member of the study team alongside video clips taken from the device of their behind-the-wheel performance. They will also receive a written summary of their feedback to keep at the end of their feedback session.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
weighted electronic Driving Observation Schedule (eDOS)3 months

The weighted eDOS (Chen et al., 2020; Mazer et al., 2021) will be used to evaluate the behind-the-wheel performance of older drivers. The weighted eDOS accounts for route complexity where a total score is calculated, as the sum of errors weighted for its risk level. For each driving error, a weight is given (1=low risk; 2=moderate risk; 3=high risk) based on the type of error and the environment where it was made. For example, no signal at intersection with only one lane in low speed is considered a low-risk error whereas an inappropriate gap when making a left turn across more than one lane of traffic is a high-risk error. The weighted eDOS will be scored by a trained rater (blinded) using the GPS data of a 20-25- minute route. The weighted eDOS emerged from research examining the real-world driving of older drivers and has good inter-rater reliability, internal consistency and ecological validity; acceptability among older drivers was high (Koppel et al., 2016; 2017).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

McMaster Automotive Resource Centre

🇨🇦

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

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