RadishRose
SF VIP
- Location
- Connecticut, USA
maybe enough is enough.
A doctor can’t have a license pulled. All they can do is send a diagnosis to the authorities and them take care of it. It’s not as easy as people think to get a dangerous drivers Iicense revoked.It’s time to park the car and put the keys on the hook. Do yourself a huge favor and stop driving. I would think your doctor would have enough sense to have your license pulled.
Tear up your license before you kill someone.
A doctor can’t have a license pulled. All they can do is send a diagnosis to the authorities and them take care of it. It’s not as easy as people think to get a dangerous drivers Iicense revoked.
Well this is good news. When my dad was in his 90’s and still driving, it was very difficult trying to get him to stop. I had to hide his car and then his car keys. He had 3 sets of them.I'm not sure where OP lives - his avatar says Easy Coast if that helps others know - but in Australia - a doctor certainly can
revoke your licence on medical grounds.
You can appeal that - although after over a decade working in general practice I have only ever known one person to successfully do so.
There is also a TV campaign at the moment saying "dont give up driving by accident" - encouraging seniors to know when to voluntarily relinquish their licence, before anything happens.
Certainly seems that is what OP should do - either permanantly or at least until these episodes can be medically treated/prevented, if that is possible
Exactly. Sorry, I wasn’t being more precise, but the doctor does start the ball rolling and his opinion carries a lot of weight. Once the DMV receives the doctor’s statement, they normally will have the driver report to a local driving license center for possibly a review of the rules and may also test his judgment by using computer generated situations and the driver selecting the correct answer.A doctor can’t have a license pulled. All they can do is send a diagnosis to the authorities and them take care of it. It’s not as easy as people think to get a dangerous drivers Iicense revoked.
Poor mother-in-law with dementia, the family should have invited her to live with them.When my brother-in-law's mother was descending into dementia but still insisted on driving, the "boys" were too scared of her to take away the car, so the other brother went over and disabled it.
She'd call him every day and ask him to come over and fix the car. He'd say he would and then wouldn't.
After a couple of weeks, she forgot she had a car. Problem solved.