After recovering from cerebral hemorrhage, you may drive a motor vehicle if your vision, hearing, limb mobility, and other physiological functions have recovered well.
When cerebral hemorrhage occurs, there may be various symptoms such as impaired mobility of limbs, sensory disorders, impaired hearing or vision, etc. With the treatment of the disease, the above symptoms may gradually recover, but there may also be a disproportionate amount of after-effects left behind. The ability to drive a motor vehicle depends on the degree of recovery of the above symptoms.
Those who do not have obvious visual field blindness, color weakness or color blindness, serious hearing impairment, good recovery of limb mobility, hemiplegia and other symptoms affecting the safety of driving a motor vehicle may be allowed to drive a vehicle after passing a medical examination. However, in case of hemiplegia, color weakness or color blindness, they cannot drive a motor vehicle.
Whether you can drive a motor vehicle or not, you need to be examined and appraised by a professional medical institution, and you should not drive hastily to avoid affecting the safety of your life.