What is it about?
The medical term for 'fainting' is syncope. Among people who experience an episode of syncope, about 10% will experience another episode in the following year. Syncope is characterized by loss of consciousness, so someone who experiences a recurrence of syncope while driving a motor vehicle is very likely to crash. This might hurt or kill the driver, their passengers, or other people on the road. As a result, doctors are often asked to advise patients about driving safety after syncope. Unfortunately, very few studies guide doctors' advice. We examined police data for 475 car crashes that occurred among 9,507 drivers who had previously visited an emergency department for an episode of syncope. We found that prior syncope did not appear to increase crash risk. However, our results do not apply to people who completely stopped driving after syncope. Future studies should focus on driving safety among patients at very high risk of syncope recurrence.
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Why is it important?
Syncope affects one in three people in their lifetime. Asking those people to stop driving might prevent crashes, but driving cessation can cause unemployment, social isolation, and unhappiness. Better research data is needed to find the right balance between traffic safety and the benefits of being able to drive.
Perspectives
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Syncope and subsequent traffic crash: A responsibility analysis, PLoS ONE, January 2023, PLOS,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0279710.
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Resources
Syncope and the Risk of Subsequent Motor Vehicle Crash: A Population-Based Retrospective Cohort Study
This is a report of a cohort study design that tried to address the same questions using a different technique.
Driving Safety After an Acute Illness—This Is Our Lane
This is an editorial written about our cohort study.
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