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Journal Article

Citation

Beran RG, Devereux JA. Intern. Med. J. 2007; 37(5): 336-339.

Affiliation

Australian College of Legal Medicine and Department of Neurology, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. roy.beran@unsw.edu.au

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1445-5994.2007.01349.x

PMID

17504284

Abstract

Following the decision in the Gillet Case it may no longer be safe to rely on the Austroads guidelines when considering fitness to drive. This paper examines the case and its implications. Although the Guidelines claimed '... the identification and application of world best-practice...', they were disregarded by the court in Gillet. Both expert witnesses testified that on disclosure of epilepsy the accused would have been endorsed as fit for a licence application to the Roads & Traffic Authority, on the basis of 10 years of only nocturnal seizures, in accordance with the guidelines. The Court rejected this evidence and interpreted failure to disclose epilepsy as recognition of perceived risk and the previously undiagnosed sleep apnoea as the basis for that risk, despite being diagnosed after the accident. There needs to be greater certainty in the application of the guidelines, with legislative intervention and licenses should display a bold statement advising drivers of their responsibility to notify authorities of illnesses that could potentially affect driving.


Language: en

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