Driving Glasses -- Full-Length Doctor's
Interview
In this full-length doctor's interview,
Eli Peli, O.D., explains how new telescopic glasses are
letting some low vision patients drive again.
Ivanhoe Broadcast News
Transcript with
Eli Peli, O.D., Vision
Researcher,
Harvard Medical School/Schepens Eye
Institute, Boston, Massachusetts,
TOPIC: Driving
Glasses
When we talk about low vision and people who
have low vision, what exactly are we talking
about?
Peli: We're talking about people
that have reduced vision for some reason that cannot be
corrected with normal glasses or contact lenses.
So anyone who has vision that can't be
corrected to 20/20 would be considered to have low
vision?
Peli: We say that it cannot be
corrected to the level that would make it possible to
read a newspaper for example. So, that would be 20/50 or
somebody who has actual difficulty as a result of the
reduced vision. Because if you have slightly reduced
vision, you may still be able to function essentially
normally. In relation to driving, which is what we're
talking about, low vision would be anybody that doesn't
pass the screening test, which the law states is 20/40.
So, for the purpose of driving with low vision, anybody
whose vision is not corrected with regular glasses or
contact lenses to 20/40 would be low vision. There is
one other category that's important to consider --
people that have very sharp vision, but their vision
field is restricted for some reason. Those would be
considered low vision as well. But, it's a different
type of low vision.
What are some of the conditions that cause
low vision?
Peli: The leading cause of low
vision is macular degeneration, or more commonly
age-related macular degeneration. That is a very common
disease with the elderly. Diabetic retinopathy, which is
the complication of diabetes in the eye, and many other
diseases would cause similar kinds of loss. The other
end of low vision, including tunnel vision or reduced
visual field, occurs in glaucoma and retinitis
pigmentosa. Also, loss of half the visual field occurs
after stroke or other brain injury. We call that
hemianopia.
Can people with hemianopia and glaucoma ever
be expected to drive?
Peli: Well, the truth is that in
many of these cases we don't know. There is either very
little or no research to tell us whether they can drive.
The regulations have been set in a vacuum of knowledge.
The evidence is pretty clear that many of these people
can drive because the regulations across the United
States vary substantially. Because many states don't
have regulations that prohibit driving with hemianopia,
many of these patients do drive. The problem is that
because they're not registered as having hemianopia,
there's no follow-up. There's no research. We don't know
if they drive worse than others. It's possible that they
drive and they have more accidents. We lack that
information at the moment. But, I know many of them who
drive and drive safely for many years.
There was a recent case of a woman driving in Florida
where hemianopia is prohibited. The woman was driving
for 13 years, every day for a job, taking her kids to
school, and had no accidents and no citations
whatsoever. Somebody squealed on her to the authorities,
and they took her license away. So, she appealed and
complained to the federal government and won that
appeal. The state is appealing that complaint, but the
effect here is a woman with hemianopia who has been
driving every day for 13 years with no events whatsoever
to suggest that there's a problem. Of course, it's just
one example, but there are many examples like this. And,
we simply don't know. I'm not saying that every person
with hemianopia shouldn't be driving and couldn't be
driving safely, but how do you determine that?
So, why did you decide a book like this,
"Driving with Confidence", was needed?
Peli: I have been working with these
patients in my practice for years. I'm helping them
realize that losing your driver's license is really a
terrible thing for many people. It's even worse in this
country than it is in other places because the lack of
public transportation. The loss of a driver's license is
making this a kind of lock-in-the-house condition. Many
people suffer a lot if they don't get to drive, and they
don't know what the situations are that would let them
extend their driving condition. I thought that this book
was something that was very needed. My brother is a
writer, and we wanted to do something together. We
thought about what would work for us together, and the
idea of writing a book for the public where he could
help with the transmitting of ideas was born.
So, is the goal ultimately to share with them
the new research that's out there?
Peli: The main goal of the book is
to show them the valid, current information on the
legal, social and other consequences of the situation.
At the end of the book, we put in some of the new things
that are just on the cusp of being in research. I do
research in that area, so I'm familiar with a lot of
this. The main goal of the book is to provide people
with some tools to make decisions of whether they can
drive or not -- and if they can't drive to, how to find
the help to make it possible for them to drive with low
vision. Or if they shouldn't drive, it is meant to help
them get to that decision in time before an accident
occurs. Also, it provides them some help on what to do
in the situation where they don't have a car anymore.
There are very few places in the country where proper
services for people that don't drive are available. This
is something that we need to really consider as the
population ages. This will all be a more severe problem
every year.
For somebody that watches this and gets false
hope and says, "Oh my vision's not corrected, but this
doctor says I can drive," what would you say to
that?
Peli: First of all if they read the
book, they will see that it doesn't promote driving for
everybody. And, this legal situation varies so widely
across the states, that a person who could be driving
legally in one state may not be able to drive legally in
another state. So, it's an individual question in regard
to where you reside. The condition of people varies
substantially and where a person could drive in one
state, another person would not be able to drive with a
similar diagnosis. And, maybe not that much difference
in visual condition. So, it needs help of a low vision
specialist who would be able to tell them more closely
whether they can legally drive or not. Then it needs the
help of other professionals, such as driving instructors
who specialize in driving with the handicapped. That
will tell them if they're safe to drive. So, I'm always
telling my patients that there are two issues involved
in driving. First, can you legally drive? If you can't,
then we can't continue along any lines because you can't
do it if it's not legal. But, if it's legal, it still
may not be safe for an individual person, and that needs
to be determined as a second thing. If both conditions
are met, it is legal in the state you reside, and it is
safe, then you could go on into driving.
What does that mean for people who might pick
this up and who thought that they couldn't drive and
there was no way that they could, but now find out that
they can? What's that like for them?
Peli: It's quite exciting for people
to find out that they can drive. Many of the patients
that I deal with that have been driving are elderly, but
I also deal with people who have never driven. For a
young person to find that they can drive, it means a
whole change in lifestyle. For an old person, it means
the ability to maintain independence, social
connections, and mobility. So, it's a big impact on the
life of people either way. Losing their license is a
huge impact and gaining or regaining the license is
equally a big impact. In a recent survey that we did of
60 bioptic (this is the name of telescopic glasses)
Drivers, we found that the vast majority of them are
employed. So, it's a clear indication that this has an
amazing impact on quality of life and the ability to
combat life the way you want to. It is an exciting thing
for people to find that they can drive. But, the
cautionary note should be that if the disease is
progressing, the likelihood is it may only extend
driving for some more time and then it'll catch up with
the condition or situation where you cannot continue. In
some cases, even if it is legal, driving may not be safe
and that needs to be assessed and determined before some
more serious regrets than losing a license occur.
Tell me a little bit about the telescope
glasses that Lauren has. What do those do for
her?
Peli: The telescope glasses are used
by people who lose their sharpness of vision. These
people can drive fine most of the time. They have enough
vision to maintain the car on the road, to maintain the
distance of the car ahead of them, to spot a pedestrian
getting into the road, to see all the other cars, and do
all the necessary maneuvers. But, there are things that
require sharp vision, such as reading road signs,
reading street signs, or sometimes spotting the traffic
light from a large enough distance if the road is open.
What they do is they tip their head, look through the
telescope, read the sign and they have enough time to
respond to the sign then from an appropriate distance.
So, in that survey that I mentioned, we found out that
most drivers use those telescopes only 5 percent of the
time where they need something else. So, 95 percent of
the time, they drive looking through the regular lens
with the regular reduced vision that they have.
Who can the glasses help?
Peli: The glasses help anybody whose
visual acuity, or sharpness of vision, is reduced below
the 20/40 or other limit that may exist in their state.
But those who still have full frontal view are able to
drive the car 95 percent of the time without those
telescopes and need the telescopes in order to perform
those other specific tasks. In 34 states, this driving
is permitted, and therefore people from those states
could benefit from them. The glasses that Lauren had
that we saw last night, I have to say they're not the
most attractive.
Are those something that you have developed?
Is that something that's going to be
available?
Peli: No. The glasses that Lauren
has, the telescopes she has are commercially available.
I had nothing to do with their development. But, I agree
with you that they are not very attractive, and it is a
big issue for many patients. I have a patient that has
been driving with telescopes for 20 years now and
actually more than one, and they've never been seen with
the glasses, even when they approach the tollbooths,
they remove them before the tollbooth operator sees
them. So, this is a big issue for people the way they
look. These telescopes are also used for other things
besides driving, and then the cosmetic issue becomes
even bigger. So, we've been developing a new design for
these, which will embed the telescopic lens inside the
spectacle lens. I can give you some pictures of the
design and how it will look. Those we hope, will solve
the problem of the cosmetic issue. In addition, they
have some other specific advantages for driving, which
we can discuss as well.
Like what?
Peli: When you look through the
current telescope, it blocks the view of the world,
except for the part that you are looking at. So, if
you're looking at a road sign, it blocks part of the
road view. The new telescope that we're designing and
working on developing, rather than blocking the view,
we'll move that view of the magnified telescope up
toward the sky where it's not blocking the road view so
that people will be able to maintain caution in
monitoring the road while they are using the telescope
to read the street or road sign.
Is there anything else about the telescopic
glasses or about the book and your message to people in
general that you want to add?
Peli: The message is a message of
hope and of caution. I think for many people, there is
hope with this book. Using this book they can find out
if they can drive, and they can find the resources in
the book of where to get the help in order to get there.
It is a process. It's not a simple thing. The telescopes
are expensive. People may require training that may cost
them more money, and it takes time. And, the caution is
that it's not for everybody, it's not in every state,
and it may be that even if you get to drive for a few
more years, that if you have a progressive disease, at
some point, you'll have to consider other alternatives.
And, such other alternatives are not enough in this
country, and we really need to develop them more.
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END OF
INTERVIEW

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