logo
Health checks on older Hong Kong taxi drivers should be ‘targeted': experts

Health checks on older Hong Kong taxi drivers should be ‘targeted': experts

Compulsory health checks on older taxi drivers in Hong Kong to evaluate their capacity to drive should be targeted to cover cabbies' cognitive abilities and take into account their medications, with clearer guidelines on specific conditions, industry experts have said.
Advertisement
Ringo Lee Yiu-pui, honorary life president of the Hong Kong, China Automobile Association, said on Monday that more regular health screenings for drivers aged 65 or above should be conducted, with specific and comprehensive tests, before they could renew their licences.
'We could introduce cognitive assessments because seniors might be weaker in their cognitive abilities for driving,' Lee told a radio programme, adding that those who only passed a physical examination might not necessarily be fit to drive long hours professionally.
Hong Kong authorities have faced renewed calls for stricter health checks on older cabbies after a
Filipino tourist was killed last week by a speeding taxi driven by an 80-year-old.
On Saturday, Secretary for Transport and Logistics Mable Chan pledged to tighten requirements through legislation
no later than the first quarter of next year
Advertisement
Under current regulations, only those aged 70 or older are required to submit health reports, while their driving licences can be renewed for up to three years. The fitness certification covers aspects such as the driver's eyesight and hearing, skeletal and muscular system, balance and coordination, and mental state, among others.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hong Kong revs up development of autonomous vehicles with new, expanded trials
Hong Kong revs up development of autonomous vehicles with new, expanded trials

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong revs up development of autonomous vehicles with new, expanded trials

Hong Kong is ramping up efforts to develop driverless vehicle services by launching a trial at Cyberport and expanding an initiative at the West Kowloon arts hub following road tests in other areas. The Transport Department said on Thursday that mainland Chinese tech giant Baidu was also interested in applying to test autonomous vehicles in Kai Tak, in addition to its trials in Northern Lantau and Tung Chung. The trial at the West Kowloon Cultural District was expected to move forward to road tests with passengers on autonomous minibuses on public roads this year, it added. The department said earlier that it had approved a trial to be conducted at Cyberport, the digital tech hub in Southern district, involving 10 driverless private cars. The licensee, Baidu Apollo International, has been running similar tests in northern Lantau and Tung Chung since December 2024 and June this year, respectively. A spokesman for the department said the tests had been smooth, with the vehicles maintaining a stable performance.

Harmful substances found in 13 out of 28 school shoe models sold in Hong Kong
Harmful substances found in 13 out of 28 school shoe models sold in Hong Kong

South China Morning Post

time3 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Harmful substances found in 13 out of 28 school shoe models sold in Hong Kong

Nearly half of 28 models of primary school shoes sold in Hong Kong contain harmful substances, with carcinogens exceeding international safety limits found in four, tests by the consumer watchdog have revealed. The Consumer Council on Thursday also published international test results showing that three out of 22 child car seats models sold locally had 'weaker crash protection', and trace amounts of harmful substances were found in eight. For the shoe results, published ahead of the start of the new school year, the council tested the 28 models for chemical safety and physical performance. The shoes cost from HK$198 to HK$599. It found 'various harmful substances' in 13 of them, including the carcinogen chromium VI, aromatic amines, formaldehyde and the reproductive toxicant phthalates. Chromium VI is typically formed during leather tanning and can cause lung cancer. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified it as a Group 1 'carcinogenic to humans' agent.

Chinese tycoon Li Shufu's Geely Auto posts first-half profit decline, but beats estimates
Chinese tycoon Li Shufu's Geely Auto posts first-half profit decline, but beats estimates

South China Morning Post

time4 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Chinese tycoon Li Shufu's Geely Auto posts first-half profit decline, but beats estimates

Geely Auto, mainland China's second-largest carmaker , reported a 14 per cent drop in first-half profit even as revenue surged on sales of electric vehicles (EVs) to budget-conscious consumers aided by heavy discounts. Profit for the January to June period came in at 9.3 billion yuan (US$1.3 billion) versus 10.8 billion yuan a year earlier based on international accounting standards, according to a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Thursday. The profit exceeded the 7.6 billion yuan expected by analysts pooled by Bloomberg. Revenue grew 27 per cent to 150.3 billion yuan. Excluding one-off gains and losses, the company's underlying net profit jumped 102 per cent to 6.7 billion yuan. Most of Geely's domestic rivals were likely to report improved earnings performance amid a buoyant EV market, although a brutal price war squeezed their profit margins, according to Phate Zhang, founder of Shanghai-based data provider CnEVPost. 'But investors will still be cautious about their earnings outlook as sales have slowed down in the third quarter due to an easing of the price competition,' he said. Geely Auto will not build new plants amid excess capacity worldwide, chairman Li Shufu told the Chongqing Auto Show a few months ago. Photo: Handout Geely delivered 1.41 million petrol and electric cars to customers in the first half, up 47 per cent from a year earlier. Its EV sales climbed 126 per cent to 725,000 units. The company's parent, Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, controlled by Chinese billionaire Li Shufu, also owns Volvo Cars and a stake in Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store