Abstract

BackgroundSince there is evidence that mental health aspects (such as depression) may inhibit an optimal rehabilitation outcome, there is growing interest in the psychosocial aspects of vision loss as part of rehabilitation. The purpose of this study is to provide more insight into the construct validity and (longitudinal) interpretation of goals related to ‘Coping with mental (emotional) health aspects’ which are part of the recently developed ‘Dutch ICF Activity Inventory (D-AI). Moreover, the data allowed to provide some insight in the outcome in this domain in relation to rehabilitation programs followed in Dutch Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation Centers at baseline and follow-up.MethodsIn a cohort of 241 visually impaired persons, the D-AI was assessed at baseline (enrollment), 4 and 12 months, The importance and difficulty of the D-AI goals ‘Handle feelings’, ‘Acceptance’, and ‘Feeling fit’ and difficulty scores of underlying tasks were further analyzed, together with similar or related standardized questionnaires. At baseline, Spearman correlations were determined between D-AI goals and task and additional questionnaires to investigate the construct validity. Corrected and uncorrected linear mixed models were used to determine longitudinal rehabilitation outcomes in relation to rehabilitation programs followed.ResultsBaseline correlations indicated that the difficulty of tasks and the umbrella goal ‘Acceptance’ were not similar. Longitudinal analyses provided insight in some subtle differences in concepts measured at the goal and task level of the D-AI, as well as similar validated questionnaires. After correcting for confounding variables, none of the underlying task difficulty scales changed over time. For goal difficulty scores only ‘Acceptance’ was reported to be significantly less difficult at 4 and 12 months follow-up. Importance scores of goals were stable from baseline to follow-up.ConclusionWith respect to the constructs measured, results support the formulation of the new goal question ‘Emotional life’ which replaces the goals ‘Handle feelings’ and ‘Acceptance’. Results indicate that MRCs should pay more attention to problems related to mental health. They have started to use the D-AI as it seems a promising tool to investigate and evaluate rehabilitation needs (including those related to mental health) over time and to clearly define rehabilitation goals from the very start.

Highlights

  • Since there is evidence that mental health aspects may inhibit an optimal rehabilitation outcome, there is growing interest in the psychosocial aspects of vision loss as part of rehabilitation

  • Recruitment of study population Eligible participants were aged ≥18 years, with adequate command of the Dutch language, and with sufficient cognitive ability to participate in the study

  • All patients with a need for lowvision rehabilitation that had enrolled in the Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation Center (MRC) were allowed to participate

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Summary

Introduction

Since there is evidence that mental health aspects (such as depression) may inhibit an optimal rehabilitation outcome, there is growing interest in the psychosocial aspects of vision loss as part of rehabilitation. The self-reported health-related quality of life of visually impaired persons is lower than that of their sighted peers [1]. Persons with low vision show adverse mental health outcomes, such as feelings of social isolation [15], emotional distress [5,16] and depression [17,18,19,20]. Visual impairment has been associated with lower (psychosocial) wellbeing, expressed by loss of interest and inability to enjoy activities [25]. The adverse impact on mental wellbeing seems to increase the risk of mortality in persons with a visual impairment [26]

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