Does a person have to follow medical advice?
In some cases, the doctor will tell the person to stop driving straightaway. This will happen if the person’s symptoms will clearly make them unsafe on the road. The doctor may be unsure of someone’s ability and will want them to stop driving until more tests are done.
Medical advice like this must always be followed – even if it takes many weeks for DVLA/DVA to decide if the person can keep driving.
What does the law say about driving and mild cognitive impairment?
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a condition that causes minor problems with memory, perception, reasoning, judgement or attention. People diagnosed with MCI do not have dementia, but some will get it over time.
MCI can affect a person’s driving, but this happens much less often than in dementia. This means that drivers diagnosed with MCI do not always have to tell DVLA/DVA about their condition.
If a person with MCI finds their driving is affected by their MCI symptoms, they must tell DVLA/DVA about this. A person’s close family, friends or healthcare professional may be good judges of their driving and can also tell DVLA/DVA if needed.
As with dementia, DVLA/DVA will ask for a medical report and decide if the person is safe to drive.
If the person does not tell DVLA/DVA about a dementia diagnosis
Some people who are diagnosed with dementia do not tell the driver licensing authorities and keep driving. This may be because they do not accept or recognise their diagnosis, or they aren’t aware of how much their dementia is affecting their driving.
Not telling DVLA/DVA puts the person at risk of a fine and arrest as well as a possible accident. It also puts them in danger of driving without insurance as their policy may now be invalid.
If this happens, the doctor should try to persuade the person to stop driving and encourage them to tell DVLA/DVA (or let their family do this for them).
If this does not work, the doctor may have to give the person’s relevant medical information to DVLA/DVA. The doctor does not need to ask the person before they do this, but they must tell them afterwards in writing.
This can all be very difficult and stressful for the person with dementia, their family, their doctor and anyone else supporting them. For tips on how to handle these situations and to find out what support is available, see our page 'When DVLA/DVA decides the person must stop driving'.
It may be helpful to try to reason with the person. However, for some people, their dementia may mean that they are not able to accept their diagnosis or understand how it affects their driving.