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My parents are 92 and 95. During the fall-spring they live independently (with minor assistance) in an apartment. This summer, as usual, they plan on going back to their island home on a lake. Once there, while they have some unreliable help, I know they plan to drive the motor boat from the marina across the lake to their home. My mother does not drive the boat. My father has significant loss of eyesight from macular degeneration (he is getting eye injections). He has serious hearing loss and can only hear when someone else is near the microphone that connects to his hearing aids. Lastly, my father is experiencing dementia: he can no longer read or follow the story from an audiobook. He is physically strong. Last summer my father drove the boat without incident. (Though no family member would let him drive them in the boat.)


I am curious what you folks think - how much to get involved with him driving the boat? He has not had an accident yet. My parents are living independently and in general they are making smart decisions. He may well drive safely this summer. Or he may not. My concern is not so much for my parents' safety - that is their decision. My concern is someone else boating or swimming on the lake....


P.S. - He stopped driving the car 2 years ago.

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And if he clips a kid that's in the water who he doesn't see or hear?
If his own family won't go in the boat with him then there's clearly a problem. He has a responsibility to be a safe boat operator, and if you think he isn't safe then either make sure he has a set of reliable eyes and ears on the boat with him or curtail the boating.
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No, he should not be driving a boat. His Eye Doctor should be telling him No. I read where u need to be licenced in the State of NH. (Looks like maybe all States) If you do, find out if there is a test he can be given to determine if he can drive or not. If he can't, they can probably pull his license.
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Given that your Mom cannot handle the boat in any way, I think this sounds very dangerous indeed. You know your Dad better than I. It is very sad that he seems not to understand his limitations, and is willing to risk his and his wife's life. This alone shows that his thinking is impaired.
I cannot imagine what can be done by this. Were I his wife I would refuse to go. If he wishes to risk his own life then, that is perhaps not a terrible way to go. As you say, your concern is for others. I think that you are right.
I would speak honestly with him. I tell you this as someone who had no idea, living across the state, that my brother already knew "something was wrong" prior to his diagnosis with probable early Lewy's Dementia. He ended up having smashed up both a huge debris collector, a huge palm tree, his own truck and his head. Happily no one but he himself was hurt, but he lay bleeding in the arms of his neighbor saying "I knew something was wrong. I knew". He was so thankful, the remainder of his life, that he didn't injure anyone.
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I have always said .. it is not how many accidents you have had that is important but...how many have you caused that is important.
It would be a good idea to have a family member ride in the boat with him to assess how well he does drive and how well he can see other boaters, swimmers and can he see well enough to dock the boat and properly secure it.
I would probably discourage it until someone has assessed how well he does.
And why did he give up driving 2 years ago? Was it because he felt unsafe driving? If so you might point out that during the summer, on a lake there is more dangerous traffic on the lake than on the road.
Drunk drivers
Fast boats with people that are busy partying with friends
Teens with their friends skiing or other water sports.
No lanes to keep people out of the way of other boaters.
I would encourage him NOT to drive the boat or at least until someone can evaluate how well he does. (AND not say anything until they have reached the house and he has docked the boat. Take the trip just like someone evaluating any driver) Also evaluate how well they can get in and out of the boat, can they do it safely?
IF he does give up driving the boat will they be able to go to the vacation home? Would someone deliver groceries, check up on them, pick them up for a trip to town, pick them up for just a nice drive around the lake? If not maybe that is what he is fearing, that the vacation home will be more of a confinement than a pleasurable time.
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If he can't drive a car, he can't drive a boat -- period. It's harder to turn a boat, steer a boat, or stop a boat. It's also harder to get in and out of a boat.

With macular degeneration, he has lost his central vision and only has peripheral vision. People lose their peripheral vision as they age anyway, so his vision is seriously compromised all the way around. Deafness is also an enormous problem.

There's no getting around it -- he shouldn't be driving any motorized vehicle. If he killed anyone, it would be horrific.
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