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Usefulness of Austroads’ fitness-to-drive guidelines: lessons from the Gillett case

Roy G Beran, Paul Gerber and John A Devereux
Med J Aust 2009; 190 (9): 503-505. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2009.tb02529.x
Published online: 4 May 2009

Ross Gillett, a man with epilepsy, failed to disclose this condition to the Roads and Traffic Authority, New South Wales, when seeking a drivers licence, and similarly misled his employer about his condition. On 2 May 2003, Gillett had a seizure while driving and caused a fatal car accident.

Therapeutic concentrations of carbamazepine in Gillett’s blood after the accident suggested that he had been compliant with medical advice. Investigations after the accident showed previously undiagnosed sleep apnoea.

At Gillett’s trial for contravening section 52A of the Crimes Act (Dangerous Driving Occasioning Death) 1900 (NSW), two expert medical witnesses indicated that sleep apnoea could have converted nocturnal seizures to daytime seizures. The expert witnesses also said that, if asked before the diagnosis of sleep apnoea, they would have supported Gillett’s application to drive, on the basis that his situation was significantly safer than the minimum standards for fitness to drive, as is provided for in the Austroads Assessing fitness to drive guidelines.1 However, when assessing fitness to drive, the trial judge refused to admit the Austroads guidelines into evidence. He found Gillett guilty of dangerous driving occasioning death.

If the guidelines had been admitted and used, Gillett would have been deemed fit to drive. In this case, how could he have been convicted of dangerous driving simply for driving while “fit to drive”?

In making the decision to find Gillett guilty, the judge took into consideration a similar accident caused by Gillett in 1993. Relying on the evidence, and with the benefit of hindsight, the trial judge found that Gillett’s 1993 accident was also due to a daytime seizure. This conclusion about the previous accident, combined with Gillett’s failure to disclose his epilepsy to the relevant authorities, led the judge to believe that Gillett knew he was not in a fit state to drive when he did drive on 2 May 2003. Gillett’s driving, knowing he was not fit to do so, constituted “an unacceptable level of risk to fellow road users”.2

The trial judge’s decision brings into sharp focus the issue of what, exactly, is an acceptable risk? How should the courts balance the interests of the community in being protected from harm against the right of an individual not to be arbitrarily deprived of a drivers licence?

Status of the Austroads guidelines

In this article, we argue that, although Gillett’s subsequent appeal to the Court of Criminal Appeal failed, it is significant that the appeal court held that the trial judge had erred in his refusal to allow the Austroads guidelines to be tendered.

The Court of Criminal Appeal dealt with the function of the guidelines and their relevance in determining the issue of whether the accused’s driving was objectively dangerous, in the following way:3

Medicolegal implications

We question the Court of Criminal Appeal’s assumption that “it would be reasonable to infer” that, if Gillett had observed the requirement for a consultant’s opinion, his symptoms would have led to further investigation, which in turn would have revealed his true condition and, presumably, resulted in the cancellation of his drivers licence.

Until the time of the fatal accident, Gillett had been treated by an experienced neurologist (and an accredited sleep physician), who found nothing to arouse suspicion of sleep apnoea. Indeed, the unchallenged evidence adduced at Gillett’s trial was unequivocal: it was only after the 2003 accident that Gillett’s sleep apnoea was diagnosed (by R G B) — and then only as a result of intensive investigation and repeated polysomnography — not because of suspicion of sleep apnoea, but in an attempt to explain what had caused Gillett to suffer a daytime seizure.

We, therefore, suggest that there was nothing in the evidence adduced at Gillett’s trial to support the Court of Criminal Appeal’s “reasonable inference”.

However, the reason that the Court of Criminal Appeal’s comments on the admissibility of the guidelines are significant is that, by implication, they reject the trial judge’s finding that “the fact that the accused was driving while there was . . . [a] risk of seizure . . . subjected other people to a real . . . risk of injury and death”.

In one sweeping statement, the trial judge would have disqualified all people with longstanding controlled epilepsy “with [a] risk of seizures” from driving, thereby pushing aside the guidelines that, on the history Gillett gave, would have supported his continued driving.

The significance of the Court of Criminal Appeal’s finding on the relevance of the Austroads guidelines, therefore, lies in the fact that had the trial judge’s rejection of the guidelines been upheld on appeal, they would henceforth be of no relevance, if only because all people with longstanding epilepsy, including those with a history of only nocturnal (sleep) seizures, would be disqualified from holding a drivers licence.

Issues for further attention

A number of issues remain unresolved. First, we ask: do the Austroads guidelines really identify the level of risk the community is prepared to accept? Inclusion in the guidelines of more information about the nature and extent of the scientific evidence on which they are based might increase the confidence of those who are expected to apply the guidelines and could be relevant to all medical conditions, not only epilepsy. Further, evidence-based comments could address issues of how safety in drivers with a medical condition is affected by the management of their condition, concomitant conditions (for example, sleep apnoea in people with epilepsy), as well as provide a scientific justification for the periods of driving exclusion imposed by the guidelines.

Second, the trial judge acknowledged the ethical dilemma for medical practitioners, conceding that the approach by doctors to disability and driving was “an attempt to balance the interests of those suffering medical conditions which may affect a person’s ability to drive and the interests of other road users who may be injured or killed if that medical condition leads to a collision on the roads”. Nevertheless, His Honour opined that:

With respect, we submit that His Honour attached undue significance to the treating neurologist’s “concern”. We submit that the practitioner in question, a highly regarded neurologist and accredited sleep physician, would undoubtedly have taken steps to ensure that the Roads and Traffic Authority was made aware of Gillett’s condition had he suspected that his patient was suffering from sleep apnoea or daytime seizures. It was only after the accident that another neurologist diagnosed Gillett’s sleep apnoea, which is now believed to be the cause of Gillett’s traffic accident.

We endorse the judge’s view that doctors attempt to balance a patient’s ability to drive with the interests of other road users, but submit that the guidelines fail to provide sufficient guidance in applying that “balance of interests”. The guidelines neither protect road users nor provide guidance that would keep doctors from future litigation.

In the section Ethics and Legal issues, the Austroads guidelines merely state that:

We forcefully submit that the guidelines should be more forthright. In W v Egdell,4 the English Court of Appeal laid down some conditions when public disclosure will outweigh the duty of confidentiality. Their Lordships held that it must be shown that:

We believe that Egdell’s case will most likely be followed by Australian courts. Therefore, doctors would be well advised when confronted by patients who satisfy the Egdell conditions, to seek approval from their medical indemnity providers that the case is one that justifies them informing driver licensing authorities of their conclusion. Further, the conversation should be contemporaneously recorded in the patient’s medical file.

Finally, it is worth pointing out that there are some patients with epilepsy who have no recollection of seizures that result in a loss of consciousness. These patients are, therefore, difficult to assess in respect of fitness to drive, even using the guidelines.

  • Roy G Beran1
  • Paul Gerber2
  • John A Devereux3

  • 1 Centre for Epilepsy Research and Services, Sydney, NSW.
  • 2 Melbourne, VIC.
  • 3 School of Law, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD.


Correspondence: ja_devereux@hotmail.com

Competing interests:

None identified.

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