I have been for a review at the hospital today. One of the reasons is that sometimes I am not aware of having a hypo until blood sugar readings are -2.5. So I raised this with the specialists. They put me on a 24 hour monitor and today I went for the results. After a mix up at the hospital I left and came home. Just taken a call from the consultant and due to the results they have said I can't drive for 8 weeks until I regain some hypo awareness This is devastating to me as there are work issue las that mean I need to be there to protect my job and if I can't drive I am not able to get there on public transport without adding 3 hours each way making it impossible to get to the office. Plus with everything going on at work I am not sure they would wear me being off for that long without handing me a P45. How can I get round this. Will the hospital report me to the DVLA. What can I say to work that will get them on my side I am really really lost as to what I can do here and what support I need I am 54 years old and the stress of all this is getting to me oh and to cap this all off I am currently off work after a 3 day hospital visit with Viral Bronchitis.
Hi @PMJ ,
Sounds to me like your consultants have advised you not to drive for a certain amount of time (8 weeks.) until hypo awairness is recovered?
Take the advice. Work with the consultants.
Doesn't sound like you need to inform DVLA, as you have had no debilitating hypo events needing 3rd party assistance. Thus a review of your licence entitlement..
You might get away with running a red light but should you be involved in something serious then the police can usually and do usually check everything.Yeah. Licence is as good as suspended. My insurance will be invalid as will my licence. So if I got stopped whilst driving and the DVLA have not been informed I am not sure what or how any punishment could be metered out. Don't get me wrong I have no intention of ignoring the advice but it does beg asking (especially when you have time on your hands )
See the quote above I messed it up. That was my point at the beginning of this thread: The guy's license isn't suspended. They have no right to contact the Driving Police. He hasn't had a problem driving. He may have what the Diabetes Police refer to as "hypo unawareness" which IMO is a pretty arbitrary and vague "condition". And they somehow will mess around and clear him of his crime. But he should be able to drive just like the rest of you, testing before he gets behind the wheel, etc.
Oh, I get it sure (rolls eyes). Now that they took the OP off the highways you're all SO MUCH SAFER. So if you're the privileged "hypoAWARE" ones you can drive if you test. Or if you don't test. Or if you test and are 3.3 and just jump in the car and head for the pub without eating a thing. But if you're the OP and are the shamed hypoUNAWARE and you happen to mention this to some gubment/healthcare Bozo you get punished for it. Punished even if you test before driving, and correct if need be, and have had diabetes for like 30 years and never had a driving incident due to being low. I'm glad you're all safer now and you should sleep soundly!
Yeah. Licence is as good as suspended. My insurance will be invalid as will my licence. So if I got stopped whilst driving and the DVLA have not been informed I am not sure what or how any punishment could be metered out. Don't get me wrong I have no intention of ignoring the advice but it does beg asking (especially when you have time on your hands )
Do you mean if it was just a routine Police stop or if you were involved in an accident?
Strangely. I've been involved a fair few "routine stops".. Christmas drink drive campaign, commercial van driving about in the dead of night.(looking for thieves.) Blown headlight bulb. "Thanks Oficer I'll sort that in the morning."
A quick check on tyres, MOT, insurance & road tax & a look at my licence. I'm on my way!
Few stops myself over the years @Jaylee , was breathalysed for the first time about 10 years ago, it was using the hand-held traffic light device rather than the old blow-in-the bag one, got the green light as I hadn't had a drink but it was a strange experience nonetheless.
I asked her about patient confidentiality and she went on to suggest that when we fill in our 3 year license renewals the tick box that we all fill out allows her to speak to Swansea and she is not breaching confidence.
"Ahh." The officer said, waving the breathalizer in front of my face like Ben Kenobi, "you haven't been drinking."
"Are you sure you don't want me to blow in the box?" He sounded more like a Jedi as he wafted the device in front of my face & said "you haven't been drinking" I could almost hear "these are not the droids your looking for."
She has to inform you first of her intentions and the consent you sign is for the DVLA to contact your HCP if any query.I asked her about patient confidentiality and she went on to suggest that when we fill in our 3 year license renewals the tick box that we all fill out allows her to speak to Swansea and she is not breaching confidence.
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