Hope2SleepGuide

Sleep Apnoea Forum Bringing Help + Support to the Patient

Getting driving licence back from the DVLA. How long, etc.

Hello,

I am a newbie here having been referred by Tez62 of the http://www.apneaboard.com/forums

I have had my driving licence taken away by the DVLA and started using an APAP machine on Monday 2nd December 2013 four days ago.

Results from the SD card records looked promising after Wednesday and Thursday night sleep and the NHS have said that I may take in the SD card to them 2 weeks after starting with the APAP machine, i.e. on 16 December 2013.

As soon as I learn from the NHS that my OSA syndrome is controlled I will reapply for my driving licence.

How long may it take before the DVLA restores my licence to drive?

What are members' experiences in this issue please?

Views: 2696

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Sorry to hear you've had your licence taken from you. I always advise people to immediately stop driving but not to inform DVLA until you're on good treatment. No worries though as once your clinic confirm you're on successful therapy (which sounds like you are) then you just have to fill in the forms and DVLA will contact your clinic to confirm all this and you'll get your licence back. Here's a link to the SL1 form Michael https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_dat...

Oops my mistake.

Thank you Kath especially for the SL1 form,

I did somewhat jump the gun in informing the DVLA before I started treatment.

Live and learn.

Mike

Hmm. Clearly a newbie in using this forum's features!!!

Lol...don't worry I get myself confused on the forum too I was actually off the road for about 10 months because back then it took ages from diagnosis to treatment + then I had lots of struggles getting my CPAP therapy compliant (which thankfully isn't the case for you).  You can read my brief story over on the main website http://www.hope2sleep.co.uk/page/my-story

Kath, I was the one that suggest Michael join this forum for some local knowledge and I remeber some of the othe guys losing their licence and getting it back after treatment. In Australia, we just don't tell the DVLA or equilivent body. I think they are bringing in new rules to test the elderly but basically you can drive till you die. I gave Micheal some tips like mask liners and having the hose coming from above his head, he may have some other questions as well.

Terry,

As you may have read I foolishly jumped the gun in informing the DVLA before my treatment started.

I do believe that the UK DVLA "goes by the book" (or is that a CYA) and takes an uncompromising position on the issue of people driving who have been diagnosed with OSAS.

Perhaps because the UK is a crowded island where many roads are in or go through villages, towns and cities, shared by other road or roadside users such as cyclists and pedestrians, the rules of the road are more restrictiveand penalties for non-compliance more severe than those in wide open spaces found in parts of Australia and North America.

Also the availability of public transport is relatively widespread in the UK although some rural services have been reduced or cut on economic grounds leaving people who do not own private vehicles partially isolated.

I believe that the DVLA will want me to pay £20 so that I can get my licence to drive back. Maybe that is why they required me to send them my licences. However I view the process of surrender and reapply a bureaucratic waste and nonsense. Where have I heard "rip off Britain" before?

My best night thus far as shown by the software (see below) was on Thursday where the S9 was positioned on my bedroom floor, the air tube not over my head and with me forced to sleep on my left side by the towel packed back pack. I will repeat that arrangement tonight.

Mike

-----

Sleep information.

Summary Statistics

Total Usage 5.59

Apnea index: 0.6 (Obstructive 0.0, Central 0.5, Unknown 0.0)

Hypopnea: 2.9

AHI: 3.5

Leak: Median 3.6, 95th percentile 6.0, Maximum 7.2

Pressure: Median 6.6, 95th percentile 8.0, Maximum 9.6

Mike, the DVLA started taking things very seriously after the Selby Crash when that guy caused the train crash through being sleep-deprived.  It all depends who people speak to at the DVLA though as to what they're told to do.  The important thing is that people stop driving though until on treatment, but the UK needs to be quicker at giving the treatment from diagnosis.  Some clinics can sort it in days, yet some take months.

Those are good results you've posted + hope you're starting to feel better in yourself by now.


Did you mean to leave a reply Michael, as there's nothing there?
Michael Eacott said:

Kath,

I remember that tragedy. However I understand that Gary Hart admitted that he had stayed up all night speaking on the telephone to a woman friend he had just met on the internet. So that tragedy was nothing to do with sleep apnoea.

In my case my "liability to inappropriate drowsiness" has been when reading or watching TV. I have never dozed at the wheel in the last 19 years since early retirement and have always given due care and attention to my driving.

My defensive driving comes from the time when I used to ride a motorbike where driving defensively was and continues to be essential especially on today's roads where so many road users including car and some goods vehicle drivers do not take that due care and attention.

I also attended and completed a driver safety programme in the 90's as part of the requirements to be allocated a company car when I was an employee. The road analysis by the instructor stated that I was a very competent, safe and thoughtful driver. There were just two comments about extra attention required: use of brakes and use of gearbox. I discussed that with him and he accepted that as a long term motorcycle rider I had continued to use the motorcycle riding techniques of the time when their brakes were not as good as today and speed control was more reliant on using engine braking by being in an appropriate gear at all times. During the programme I corrected the above techniques for car driving.

So my essential complaint about the DVLA was their insistence that I send them the two parts of my driving license especially as it would have been irresponsible and an offence for me to drive once the DVLA had written to me to state that my licence to drive had been revoked.

Perhaps letting me keep my driving licenses and writing to me to reinstate my permission to drive once control of my "liability to inappropriate drowsiness" has been achieved is beyond the DVLA's capability.

Thanks for you good wishes. (No OSAs last night, just two 12 second Centrals. Looking promising)

I hear you loud and clear Michael   Whilst the Selby crash wasn't tiredness due to sleep apnoea it spurred the DVLA into how devastating driving when tired can be.  Driving when feeling physically ill is just the same, and my own family were victims of a tragedy in this respect when my Grandma was killed by a driver whose wife had begged him to take the bus when he'd felt ill (he had a blackout at the wheel).  Incidentally, we've discussed accidents involving sleepy drivers before + here's one of them http://hope2sleepguide.co.uk/forum/topics/more-lives-lost-through?i...

A better way forward would be written instructions banning driving until treated, followed by written confirmation, like you suggest, stating driving can be resumed.  Even better would be instant issue of CPAP on diagnosis!

Sounds like you'll be back on the road real soon with good treatment you're getting

Reply to Discussion

RSS

About

Sleep Apnoea Forum

New to the Sleep Apnoea Forum? 

1. Stop by our Sleep Apnoea Welcome Center to introduce yourself to the SleepGuide community.
2. Start a New Topic of Conversation.
3. Post your photos - of yourself, your old CPAP machine, your new CPAP machine, your pet, something about you!

Interested in advertising, have a problem or need to contact us? Click the Report an Issue page.

 

Latest Activity

Jonathan replied to John's discussion Wellu O2 Ring - is it accurate enough for the medics?
"Hi The SleepCube was a private purchase, as way back then my local sleep clinic assessed patients by filming them overnight, whilst wearing an oximeter, and only issued CPAP machines without humidifiers.  There was no remote monitoring and…"
Oct 25
John replied to John's discussion Wellu O2 Ring - is it accurate enough for the medics?
"Yeah I was wondering about email address. I thought probably if they wanted me to mail them they would have given out an address. I can imagine heart data is considered more acute than sleep data, so it would make more sense to have that…"
Oct 24
Jonathan replied to John's discussion Wellu O2 Ring - is it accurate enough for the medics?
"Hi. I didn't use PatientsKnowBest (ironic name), but I have an email address for my heart department for sending in ECGs.  I was just saying that they may be able to review a PDF when then cannot review a data file from your O2 ring. I am…"
Oct 24
John replied to John's discussion Wellu O2 Ring - is it accurate enough for the medics?
"Hi Jonathan, did you do that through PatientKnowsBest?"
Oct 24
Jonathan replied to John's discussion Wellu O2 Ring - is it accurate enough for the medics?
"On an unrelated topic, I've been able to send ECGs by PDF to my heart clinic. On the subject of Resmed and apnoeas, take a look at https://youtu.be/ufOOAfyzZso?si=Tpdl4EEiCQBZR4iD&t=276 Your machine may be under-reporting. Good…"
Oct 24
John posted a discussion

Wellu O2 Ring - is it accurate enough for the medics?

Moving some furniture my long lost O2 ring continuous oxygen saturation monitor turned up. So I've been wearing it and it tells me I have loads of saturation drops during the night even though my Airsense 10 says I have very few apneas.So I get two…See More
Oct 21
Richard Smith replied to Richard Smith's discussion air bubbles after weight loss
"Hi, Just thought I'd give an update.  So, I had my appointment with the NHS sleep clinic which was much quicker than I anticipated and I've now had the overnight sleep study.  My AHI is now 6, down from over 30, so I'm…"
Oct 15
John replied to Sally Gray's discussion Microplastics risks
"Hi Sally from what I read the airsense doesn't suffer the same foam degredation issues as the infamous Phillips machine.I can conceive it's possible that microplastics may be shed from the flexible main tube.What worries me more about the…"
Oct 7
Jonathan replied to Richard Smith's discussion air bubbles after weight loss
"Hi My sleep clinic discharged me, saying they were happy I was self-managing.  Roll on a decade and the cardiologists taking care of me were very unimpressed and I was re-enrolled.  I expect remote monitoring with current generation Resmed…"
Sep 1
Richard Smith replied to Richard Smith's discussion air bubbles after weight loss
"Hi Jonathan, Thanks again for the info.  My cpap *should* be monitored by the NHS though I haven’t had any contact from them since pre-covid.  I checked out the link you gave to access extra data and I think that’s going to be…"
Aug 31
Jonathan replied to Richard Smith's discussion air bubbles after weight loss
"Hi I have the ResMed Airsense 10 Autoset (APAP).  It's monitored remotely by my NHS sleep clinic and I believe they can make changes to the settings.  I don't know whether they are notified if I make changes, nor whether they…"
Aug 31
Richard Smith replied to Richard Smith's discussion air bubbles after weight loss
"Hi Jonathan, Thanks for the reply.  I'd say that I'm fairly technical.  I have the ResMed Airsense 10 Elite machine.  I've discovered that I can upload data wirelessly from my machine and having lowered the pressure by…"
Aug 30
Jonathan replied to Richard Smith's discussion air bubbles after weight loss
"Hi You don't say how technical you are, or what sort of machine you use.  However https://www.sleephq.com/ has software which allows you to upload data from compatible machines, and analyse your sleep "score", including a…"
Aug 29
Richard Smith posted a discussion

air bubbles after weight loss

Hi,I've been on Mounjaro for about 3 months now, not primarily for weight loss, but I have lost weight around my face and neck.  I've noticed that I am increasingly getting air bubbles in my mouth which of course is disturbing my sleep (and my…See More
Aug 28
Sally Gray posted a discussion

Micro plastics risks

I was reading an article in the I newspaper today written by a journalist who had her blood tested for micro plastics and was shocked by the results.…See More
Aug 3
Alison Mitchell is now a member of Hope2SleepGuide
Jul 2
John posted a discussion

job with the charity

Was wondering if there might be a job for me with Hope2Sleep?(I also just asked this of a group by mistake)See More
Jun 27
Tracey Tilley updated their profile
May 22
Sharon Sullivan posted a discussion

For Sale - Ventura Full Total Face CPAP Mask

I’m selling an Ventura Full Total Face CPAP Mask Large and two spare liners.  I bought it new from the Hope2Sleep shop, but it is not suitable for me.  Only used for about two weeks so I have washed it thoroughly.   Because of this, it is very much…See More
May 17
Tracey Tilley replied to Jim Scullion's discussion UK Attendance Allowance
"I put in a claim for PIP which was denied and now I am over 66 and on pension I tried for AA. Denied again.I have other health conditions ( Diverticular disease and Bile Acid Malabsorbtion ) which I consider hard to live with and they refused all of…"
May 14

© 2025   Created by The SleepGuide Crew.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service