{Reference Type}: English Abstract {Title}: [Fitness to drive in dementia - theoretical framing and design of a recommendation for German general practice]. {Author}: Pentzek M;Michel JV;Ufert M;Vollmar HC;Wilm S;Leve V; {Journal}: Z Evid Fortbild Qual Gesundhwes {Volume}: 109 {Issue}: 2 {Year}: 2015 暂无{DOI}: 10.1016/j.zefq.2015.03.005 {Abstract}: BACKGROUND: General practitioners (GPs) are among the first to be contacted by persons with dementia and their relatives. Fitness to drive in dementia is a subject of uncertainty and conflict for GPs.
OBJECTIVE: Development of recommendations for German general practice on managing fitness to drive in dementia.
METHODS: Specification of problem areas by using relevant parts of a metasynthesis of international qualitative dementia research with GPs; literature review on evidence regarding the pre-defined problem areas; deduction of a preliminary design for a recommendation in a multi-professional team.
RESULTS: The difficulties include the assessment of fitness to drive in the office setting, concerns about damaging the patient-physician relationship by raising the issue of driving fitness, and uncertainties about the GP's own legal role. A diagnosis of dementia does not per se preclude driving. The majority of elderly people would accept discussing fitness to drive with their GP. In Germany, GPs are not obliged to assess fitness to drive, or to report unsafe drivers to the Licensing Agency, but under certain conditions they do have the right to report. Addressing the issue of driving and dementia early with the patient seems to be a prerequisite for a resource-oriented and patient-centred management.
CONCLUSIONS: The distinction between medical, ethical-communicative, and legal aspects enabled us to break down this complex problem and thus provide the informative basis to draft tailored recommendations. In an ongoing project, this framework will be further developed and informed by the expertise of patients, family caregivers, and professionals from various fields.