Anti-depressants may impair driving ability
Washington, Aug 18 : People prescribed antidepressants seem to have less control over driving than people who don't and depressed people on antidepressants are much worse off driving.
University of North Dakota psychologists Holly Dannewitz and Tom Petros recruited 60 people to make a series of common driving decisions, like reacting to brake lights, stop signs or traffic signals while being distracted by speed limit signs, pylons, animals, other cars, helicopters or bicyclists.
The simulation tested steering, concentration and scanning. Thirty-one of the participants were taking at least one type of antidepressant while 29 control group members were taking no medications with the exception of oral contraceptives in some cases.
The group taking antidepressants was further divided into those who scored higher and lower on a test of depression. The group taking antidepressants who reported a high number of symptoms of depression performed significantly worse than the control group on several of the driving performance tasks.
But participants who were taking antidepressants and scored in the normal range on a test to measure depression performed no differently than the non-medicated individuals.
"Individuals taking antidepressants should be aware of the possible cognitive effects as (they) may affect performance in social, academic and work settings, as well as driving abilities," the researchers wrote. "However, it appears that mood is correlated with cognitive performance, more so than medication use."
This research is important in light of the rapid increase in the number of Americans taking antidepressants. Their use of antidepressant drugs such as Prozac, Paxil or Zoloft, nearly tripled in a decade, according to the 2004 Health United States report, issued by the National Center for Health Statistics. Among women, one in 10 takes an antidepressant drug, according to the government.
These were the conclusions of a study released Sunday at the Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association.
--IANS
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rating: This article has not been rated yet. Rate:
|
||
Jackson's Moonwalk Glove Sells For USD 350,000
Miley Cyrus' Driver Had Cardiac Arrest - Report
Bon Jovi And Sgwen Tefani Suing Bars
Noel Gallagher Attacker Pleads Guilty
Berry Gordy Honoured At Motown 50th Anniversary
Kelly Carlson's Fat Trauma
Joe Francis Too Sick For Court Appearance
John Travolta Thrilled With Street Honour
Courteney Cox Puts Cougar Town On Hold
Nicole Kidman And Kate Hudson Honour Everyday Heroes
Jackson's Moonwalk Glove For Sale
Sore Jordin Sparks Struggling To Enjoy New Number One
Stars Come Out For The Deftones
Family Issue Prompts The Cranberries To Cancel Concert
Fight Promoters Sue DMX
Judge Dismisses Assault Charges Against John Rich
John Travolta'S Family Day Out To Raise Charity Cash
Cole Slams Marriage Split Rumours
West Wing Star To Support Lopez In Dog Lawsuit
Second Autopsy Requested In Jewell Death
Lindsay Lohan Slammed By Store Over Freebie Demands
Shilpa Shetty ties the knot with Raj Kundra
7 killed, 60 injured in Assam twin blast
2 CRPF killed in Jharkhand mine blast
Gavaskar, not Sachin Tendulkar, a true Maharashtrian: Sena
Jayawardena replaces Sangakkara as No. 1 Test batsman
Sachin Tendulkar plays for BCCI, not India: Sena
Manmohan Singh arrives in Washington
'Playing Paa to Big B is difficult' : Abhishek Bachchan
'Man-woman relationship is too complicated' : Mahesh Bhatt
'70pc of my films is reality' : Madhur Bhandarkar
Jail came at the right time: Arya Babbar
'I' m only concentrating on films' : Mukesh Tyagi
'I am working on my Hindi' : Jacqueline Fernandez
'I share same energy with Ranbir': Katrina Kaif
'Don't call me 90-yr-old' : Manna Dey
'Kiss is lucky for my films': Emraan Hashmi
Manufacturing sector showing stronger signs of recovery due to stimulus: CII
Iran's Revolutionary Guards start military manoeuvres
New York man kills fellow commuter over train seat
