Abstract

AbstractWhen visual system disorders result in bilateral visual impairments, patients have difficulty performing their customary activities and experience a diminished quality of life (West et al. 2002). Visual impairments increase patients’ risk of falling (Ivers et al. 1998), injury (Salive et al. 1994), poor general health (Crews and Campbell 2001), depression (Casten et al. 2004), and even death (Pedula et al. 2006). Activity-limiting chronic visual impairments, collectively called “low vision,” most often are caused by age-related visual system disorders, with age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy, and cataract leading the list (Congdon et al. 2004). Some visual system disorders, such as diabetic retinopathy, are manifestations of more general disorders that frequently produce co-disabilities. But most low vision patients are elderly, so comorbidities and co-disabilities from diseases unrelated to their visual system disorders are common (Ahmadian and Massof 2008). Thus, for a large portion of the low vision population, activity limitations from visual impairments are superimposed on and worsen activity limitations from comorbidities (Langelaan et al. 2009).KeywordsVisual AcuityVeteran Health AdministrationService Delivery ModelHome HealthcareBlind ChildThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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