Driving skills may be rusty post-pandemic, but shouldn’t be lost forever

Rush hour traffic was lighter than normal during the morning commute heading in and out of Seattle on I-5 for most of 2020. (Photo by Karen Ducey/Getty Images)

A lot of people, including KIRO Radio’s Dave Ross, are reporting that because they’ve been holed up for so long that once they get back into a car, it’s almost like a new experience for them.

Fortunately, there are people studying things like the neuroscience of driving, one of whom is Dr. Elizabeth Walshe with the Center for Injury Research and Prevention at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

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