Driving phobia explained

Specialty:psychology

Driving phobia,[1] driving anxiety,[2] vehophobia,[3] amaxophobia or driving-related fear (DRF) is a pathological fear of driving. It is an intense, persistent fear of participating in car traffic (or in other vehicular transportation) that affects a person's lifestyle, including aspects such as an inability to participate in certain jobs due to the pathological avoidance of driving.[4] [5] [6] The fear of driving may be triggered by specific driving situations, such as expressway driving or dense traffic.[7] Driving anxiety can range from a mild cautious concern to a phobia.

Symptoms

The fear of driving is associated with various physical and subjective emotional symptoms that somewhat vary from individual to individual. For example, the physical symptoms might involve increased perspiration or tachycardia (pathologically accelerated heart rate), or hyperventilation. On the cognitive level, the patient may experience a loss of sense of reality, or thoughts of losing control while driving, even in situations that are reasonably safe.[8] On a behavioral level, the avoidance of driving tends to perpetuate the phobia. Patients who developed their amaxophobia after a serious traffic collision frequently develop the post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that may involve experiencing intrusive thoughts or anxious dreams of the original collision and/or other typical PTSD symptoms. A noteworthy part of post-collision symptomatology is the phantom brake syndrome. It is the passenger's partly involuntary or unintended pressing the foot on the floor of the car in a reflexive attempt "to brake." This unintended behavior usually occurs in skilled drivers when they are seated as a passenger next to a less competent person who drives the vehicle as a reflexive response to potentially dangerous traffic situations. The phantom brake syndrome is particularly common in survivors of serious car collisions.[9]

Associated conditions

Some patients who present with phobia of driving also describe features consistent with various other anxiety disorders, including panic disorder, agoraphobia, specific phobia, and social phobia. The majority of survivors of serious car collisions tend to experience only the phobia of driving, but they often report generalized anxiety as a part of their post-traumatic adjustment disorder.[10] The amaxophobia tends to be perpetuated by persistent pain caused by the car crash, and by pain related insomnia, and also by persistent post-conconcussion and whiplash symptoms caused by the crash. The PTSD symptoms, e.g., in the forms of flashbacks such as intrusive images of a bleeding person injured in the same car crash, may also contribute to amaxophobia. Correlations of PTSD scores to scores on measures of driving anxiety are significant and range from .31 to .79.[11]

Causes

There are three major categories of driving phobia, distinguished by their onset.[12]

The most common cause of a fear of driving is traffic collisions. Thus, the amaxophobia often develops as a reaction to a particularly traumatic vehicular collision. Beck and Coffey reported that 25–33% of people involved in a car collision associated with injuries and related evaluation in a hospital experience subsequent fear of driving.[8] Hickling and Blanchard[13] and Kuch, Swinson, and Kirby[14] found higher rates of driving phobia, ranging from 42% to 77%. The majority of experienced drivers with fear of driving in the aftermath of their serious collisions rate themselves as safer drivers than average, though they feel physically and emotionally too uncomfortable. For some patients, the fear escalates in very specific situations such as when near large vehicles (transport trucks, buses), but in others, the fear may be triggered already just by getting seated in the car or even just by thinking about having to again travel in a car in the near future. Several psychological questionnaires have been developed for clinicians to assess the situational intensity and facets of driving anxiety in novice drivers or also in experienced drivers traumatized by a recent car collision.[15] Some novice drivers and passengers who were never involved in a serious car collision also report symptoms of amaxophobia. The driving fear may be, in some patients, an extension of agoraphobia.

Treatment

The most common treatment for both driving phobia and milder forms of driving anxiety is behavior therapy[16] in the form of systematic desensitization.[17] [18] An emerging treatment approach to treating amaxophobia is through the use of virtual reality therapy.[19] With repeated exposure such as via devices similar to video games, the subjective distress is gradually reduced: the patient may subsequently be more willing to proceed to engaging in driving in real life situations, as the next stage of exposure therapy.

Psychological assessment

A variety of inventories have been developed to assess driving anxiety.

Epidemiology

Little is known about the prevalence of driving anxiety. One study found that 16% of New Zealand adults have "moderate to severe driving anxiety".[25]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Zinzow. Heidi M.. Jeffirs. Stephanie M.. January 2018. Driving Aggression and Anxiety: Intersections, Assessment, and Interventions. Journal of Clinical Psychology. 74. 1. 43–82. 10.1002/jclp.22494. 1097-4679. 28636768.
  2. Web site: r/drivinganxiety. January 7, 2022. Reddit.
  3. News: Aahhh! Study Reveals Tri-State's Most-Searched Phobias. WNBC. October 9, 2018. February 4, 2022.
  4. Taylor. Joanne E.. Deane. Frank P.. Podd. John V.. September–October 2000. Determining the focus of driving fears. Journal of Anxiety Disorders. 14. 5. 453–470. 10.1016/s0887-6185(00)00033-5. 11095540.
  5. Taylor. Joanne. Deane. Frank. Podd. John. June 2002. Driving-related Fear: A Review. Clinical Psychology Review. 22. 5. 631–645. 10.1016/s0272-7358(01)00114-3. 12113199.
  6. Taylor. Joanne E.. 2002. Understanding Driving-Related Fear. PhD. Massey University.
  7. Mathew. R. J.. Weinman. M. L.. Semchuk. K. M.. Levin. B. L.. August 1982. Driving phobia in the city of Houston: a pilot study. American Journal of Psychiatry. 139. 8. 1049–1051. 10.1176/ajp.139.8.1049. 7091430.
  8. Beck. J. Gayle. Coffey. Scott F.. December 2007. Assessment and treatment of PTSD after a motor vehicle collision: Empirical findings and clinical observations. . 38. 6. 629–639. 10.1037/0735-7028.38.6.629. 2396820. 18509507.
  9. Cernovsky. Zack Z.. Fattahi. Milad. 2021-06-15. Phantom Brake Phenomenon in Survivors of Car Accidents. European Journal of Clinical Medicine. en. 2. 3. 9–13. 10.24018/clinicmed.2021.2.3.68. 237395446. 2736-5476. free.
  10. Gutierrez. Jaime. Nosonova. Vitalina. Cernovsky. Zack. Fattahi. Milad. Tenenbaum. Silvia. 2019. Gutierrez Questionnaire for Assessments of Patients after Car Accidents. live. Archives of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. 2. 2. 10–21. 2638-5201. https://web.archive.org/web/20200619024518/https://www.sryahwapublications.com/archives-of-psychiatry-and-behavioral-sciences/pdf/v2-i2/3.pdf. June 19, 2020.
  11. Cernovsky. Zack Z.. Fattahi. Milad. Litman. Larry C.. Diamond. David M.. 2021-04-19. Validation of the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5) on Patients Injured in Car Accidents. European Journal of Medical and Health Sciences. 3. 2. 154–159. 10.24018/ejmed.2021.3.2.790. 236610072. 2593-8339. free.
  12. Web site: Advice . Health Daily . 2023-09-22 . Common Causes of Amaxophobia . 2023-09-30 . Health Daily Advice . en-US.
  13. Hickling. Edward J.. Blanchard. Edward B.. July–September 1992. Post-traumatic stress disorder and motor vehicle accidents. Journal of Anxiety Disorders. 6. 3. 285–291. 10.1016/0887-6185(92)90040-E.
  14. Kuch. Klaus. Swinson. Richard P.. Kirby. Marlene. October 1985. Post-traumatic Stress Disorder After Car Accidents. The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 30. 6. 426–427. 10.1177/070674378503000610. 4063939. 6092875.
  15. Whetstone. James Paul. Cernovsky. Zack. Tenenbaum. Silvia. Poggi. Gabriela. Sidhu. Andrew. Istasy. Marco. Dreer. Manfred. 1. 2020. Validation of James Whetstone's Measure of Amaxophobia. live. Archives of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. 3. 1. 23–33. 2638-5201. https://web.archive.org/web/20200619040204/https://www.sryahwapublications.com/archives-of-psychiatry-and-behavioral-sciences/pdf/v3-i1/3.pdf. June 19, 2020.
  16. Wolpe. Joseph. Psychotherapy by Reciprocal Inhibition. Conditional Reflex. Stanford University Press. 1968. 3. 4. 234–40. 10.1007/BF03000093. 5712667. 978-0804705097. 46015274. 58006709. Joseph Wolpe. subscription.
  17. Rachman. S.. 1967. Systematic desensitization. Psychological Bulletin. 67. 2. 93–103. 10.1037/h0024212. 6045340.
  18. Lauer. G.. 1992. The Treatment of Driving Phobia. International Journal of Psychology. 27. 3–4. 469. 10.1080/00207599208246897. free.
  19. Walshe. David G.. Lewis. Elizabeth J.. Kim. Sun I.. O'Sullivan. Kathleen. Wiederhold. Brenda K.. June 2003. Exploring the Use of Computer Games and Virtual Reality in Exposure Therapy for Fear of Driving Following a Motor Vehicle Accident. live. CyberPsychology & Behavior. 6. 3. 329–234. 10.1089/109493103322011641. 12855091. https://web.archive.org/web/20200619031614/https://vrphobia.eu/files/60.-109493103322011641_.pdf. June 19, 2020.
  20. Clapp. Joshua D.. Olsen. Shira A.. Beck. J. Gayle. Palyo. Sarah A.. Grant. DeMond M.. Gudmundsdottir. Berglind. Marques. Luana. 1. January 2011. The Driving Behavior Survey: Scale construction and validation. Journal of Anxiety Disorders. 25. 1. 96–105. 10.1016/j.janxdis.2010.08.008. 3006470. 20832988.
  21. Ehlers. Anke. Anke Ehlers. Taylor. Joanne E.. Ehring. Thoams. Hofmann. Stefan G.. Stefan Hofmann. Deane. Frank P.. Roth. Walton T.. Walton T. Roth. Podd. John V.. 1. 2007. The Driving Cognitions Questionnaire: Development and preliminary psychometric properties. Journal of Anxiety Disorders. 21. 4. 493–509. 10.1016/j.janxdis.2006.08.002. 16982173. 7839401 .
  22. Stewart. Alan E.. St. Peter. Claire C.. August 2004. Driving and riding avoidance following motor vehicle crashes in a non-clinical sample: psychometric properties of a new measure. Behaviour Research and Therapy. 42. 8. 859–879. 10.1016/S0005-7967(03)00203-1. 15178463.
  23. Taylor. Joanne E.. Sullman. Mark J. M.. May 2009. What does the Driving and Riding Avoidance Scale (DRAS) measure?. Journal of Anxiety Disorders. 23. 3. 504–510. 10.1016/j.janxdis.2008.10.006. 19062251.
  24. Steiner. Leon. Cernovsky. Zack. 2020. Convergent Validity of Leon Steiner's Measure of Driving Phobia. live. Archives of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. 3. 1. 45–50. 2638-5201. https://web.archive.org/web/20200619040939/https://www.sryahwapublications.com/archives-of-psychiatry-and-behavioral-sciences/pdf/v3-i1/5.pdf. June 19, 2020.
  25. Taylor. Joanne E.. 2018-10-01. The extent and characteristics of driving anxiety. Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour. en. 58. 70–79. 10.1016/j.trf.2018.05.031. 149785869. 1369-8478.