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Journal Article

Citation

Holowaychuk A, Parrott Y, Leung AWS. Am. J. Occup. Ther. 2020; 74(5): 7405205070p1-7405205070p8.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, American Occupational Therapy Association)

DOI

10.5014/ajot.119.040626

PMID

32804625

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Resuming driving after a change in functional ability is challenging for patients with a neurological condition. Although a combination of assessment tools has been suggested for use in driving evaluation, resources and availability of tools have been a problem.

OBJECTIVE: To examine the predictive ability of two commonly used tools, the Motor-Free Visual Perception Test (MVPT) and the Trail Making Test, Parts A and B (TMTA and TMTB), on on-road driving performance.

DESIGN: Retrospective chart review of 82 patient charts between 2015 and 2016.

SETTING: Local rehabilitation hospital.

PARTICIPANTS: Eighty-two patients with a primary neurological diagnosis (general neurological condition, n = 13; spinal cord injury, n = 11; stroke, n = 58).

OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: MVPT, TMTA, and TMTB.

RESULTS: Among the patients, 36 passed and 46 failed the on-road evaluation. The TMTA and TMTB scores were significantly different between those who passed or failed the on-road evaluation. Logistic regression analyses revealed that the TMTB completion time was the only significant predictor of on-road driving performance (for the all-patient model, 66% prediction accuracy, -2 log-likelihood [LL] = 93.47, exp β = 0.98; for the stroke-only model, 76% prediction accuracy, -2LL = 59.61, exp β = 0.97).

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Our findings suggest that the TMTB is a better predictor of on-road driving performance for patients with a neurological condition than the MVPT. The findings shed light on the importance of selecting proper tools when assessing driving performance. Future prospective studies with a wider array of predictive variables are recommended to support the present findings.

WHAT THIS ARTICLE ADDS: Occupational therapists should revisit the use of the MVPT in driving assessment and consider multiple assessment tools when evaluating and predicting driving performance.


Language: en

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