to be able to drive?
My uncle has macular degeneration and has been having treatment on his 'good' eye. He's been for more treatment today and the consultant is really pleased with the improvement in that one eye. He asked if he was able to drive and was told, 'Yes, but not at night time.'
Many moons ago I worked for DWP. I interviewed a guy who had left or lost his job as a bus driver. He was totally blind in one eye and partially sighted in the other. He assured me that he knew the route off by heart and just hoped that he didn't hit anything.
My uncle is the same, he's been driving around and we have all been terrified that he would cause some sort of accident. Luck has been on his side. Now it's official that he can drive, we can all stop chirping at him.
Thanks Tilly...strange thing is - I was thinking about this very subject a few days ago (as I've been having a bit of trouble myself with one eye, and it got me thinking).
I would have thought so. Pirates and the like with eye patches live normally: the horizontal range of vision won't be so wide and you might have to turn your head back and forth more, but as long as the clarity of vision isn't affected I think I'd be okay. Not at night, though, when everything's harder to see.
Monocular vision is not good for perceiving distances between the eye and the perceived object(s). That's not ideal for someone driving a fast vehicle weighing a ton or more.
My late OH was born blind in one eye and he drove from being 17, because he obviously had a reduced field of vision it actually made him very careful. As he got older though he disliked driving at night and he was beginning to fear the future.
I would have thought that the inhibition of depth perception and spacial awareness would make driving hazardous, but clearly, from the posts I have read, this is not the case.
AH, from the posts I have read, I wouldn't be persuaded that monocular vision is acceptablee. But I gather that it is considered acceptable by the powers that be, unless the eye-bloke says othewise.
I believe the experienced brain easily adapts (using size I presume).
Unfortunately my driving ban is due to a clot in the part of the brain which translates (for want of a better word) the feedback from the eyes so it affects both of them, creating a blind spot in the same place for both eyes. Optically both eyes are perfect (given corrective lens) so I just need a brain transplant (must visit Professor Victor Frankeinstein).
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