Older drivers are the safest
The Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM) report revealed that between 2000 and 2006, 8% of drivers were over 70 and they were involved in about 4% of crashes that cause injury, while the 15% of drivers in their teens and 20s were involved in 34% of injury crashes. On average, men in their 70s were found to make at least 100 more trips as car drivers per year than men in their late teens and 20s, according to the Older Drivers - Safe or Unsafe report. In the next 20 years, the number of male drivers over 70 will double, while the number of female drivers will treble, the report predicted. The report contradicts the common assumption that older drivers are a danger on the roads. Although older drivers were found to be safer than most other age groups, motorists over 85 were four times more likely to have caused a crash than to have been an innocent victim of one, the report said. Drivers over 70 were found to be safer on bends and overtaking than 50 year olds, but were more at risk at roundabouts, junctions and slip roads on high speed roads. |
Drivers over 70 are no more likely to cause crashes than any other driver, and are considerably safer than younger drivers, according to a report published by a motoring charity.