Title: INTRODUCTION TO LOW VISION REHABILITATION
1INTRODUCTION TO LOW VISION REHABILITATION
2Lecture Objectives
- Understands the role of low vision in adaptation
- Understands the characteristics of low vision
- Understands how low vision affects occupational
performance - Understands how low vision rehab services are
provided in the US
3Q What does vision contribute to occupational
performance?
4- The overall function of the brain is to filter,
organize and integrate sensory information to
make an adaptive response to the environment - Jean Ayres
5Vision is the primary sensory system used to
acquire information about the environment
- 80-90 of all learning occurs through the visual
channel - 90 of all sensory information supplied to the
CNS is visual
6Vision is our most far reachingsensory system
- First to alert to danger or pleasure
- Enables us to be anticipatory
- And plan for situations
7Contributions of Visual Input
- Supplies information needed for cognitive
functions of problem solving and decision making - Supplies information needed to interpret social
interactions - Supplies input for motor and postural control
- Impetus for motor development
- Warns of upcoming challenges to postural control
8- Supplies speed in information processing
- That speed is critical to the ability to adapt to
dynamic environments - Static environment nothing moving but person
- Dynamic environment objects are in motion
independent of the person
9Contributions of Vision to Occupational
Performance
10Contributions of vision to occupational
performance
- Anticipates/plans
- Drives decision making
- Interprets social interactions
- Supplies speed in information processing
- Dictates motor actions
- Early warning system for postural control
11Visual impairment can occur from
- Disease
- Trauma
- Aging
- Combination of any or all of the above
12Visual impairment can
- Alter the quality and quantity of visual input to
CNS - Alter CNS ability to use incoming visual input
- Result in a decrease in the ability to use vision
for occupational performance - Alter cognitive performance
- Can cause
- Anxiousness and uncertainty
- Decreased confidence
- Increased passivity
13Q If vision is so important to occupational
performance, why is visual impairment so often
overlooked in evaluation and treatment?
14A Because it is a hidden disability and its
symptoms are often attributed to other causes
15Because of the importance of vision to
occupational performance, a person with vision no
matter how limited will attempt to use vision to
adapt
16- Therefore it is more natural to train a person to
use his/her available vision more efficiently
than to learn to use sensory substitution
17Visual Perception
- Integration of visual input within CNS to turn
the raw data supplied by the retina into
cognitive concepts of the perception of objects
and space which can be manipulated and used for
decision making
18Visual Perceptual Hierarchy
- Visual perceptual function can be conceptualized
as being organized into a hierarchy of processes
that interact and subserve each other to provide
integration of visual information
19Visual Cognition
- Ability to use visual information to complete
cognitive processing - Use visual input to develop cognitive concepts
which we apply in decision making and problem
solving - Basis of all academics
- Foundation for many vocations
- Cannot alter vision w/o altering cognition
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22Scanning Searching
- Automatic/reflexive
- Safety mechanism
- Voluntary and planned
- Completed in an organized, systematic, efficient
pattern driven by cognition
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24Visual Attention
- Critical component for complex visual processing
- Varies from global to focal depending on type of
visual analysis needed - Simultaneously employ at least 2 types of visual
attention at all times
25Foundation Functions
- Oculomotor control
- Perceptual stability
- Visual acuity
- Visual clarity
- Visual field
- Awareness of objects
26All levels must work together
- Like parts of a car, loss or impairment of one
level affects the functioning of all other levels - Especially if a lower level function has been
impaired
27Changes causing low vision are found at
foundation level
- Visual field
- Visual acuity
- Oculomotor control
28Processes that comprise visual perceptual
processing
29Processes that comprise visual perceptual
processing
- Visual cognition
- Visual memory
- Pattern recognition
- Visual search and scanning
- Visual attention
- Oculomotor control
- Visual field
- Visual acuity
30Q What criteria dictate whether visual
impairment will be addressed in therapy?Q What
is the purpose of an O.T. evaluation?
31A patients visual performance is not significant
in terms of how it deviates from the norm but how
it interferes with occupational performance
32Whether or not a patient has a visual deficit
that requires remediation depends on his/her life
demands
33A patient has a visual deficit if his/her ability
to obtain and/or process visual information has
been altered to the extent it prevents completion
of a necessary activity of daily living
34The purpose of evaluation is not to diagnose or
label the deficit but to link the presence of the
visual deficit to a limitation in occupational
performance
35Observation of the patients functional
performance is the cornerstone of evaluation
36Two Treatment Approaches
- Person centered approach
- Emphasis is on changing the person
- Improving ability to take in and process visual
information - Environment centered approach
- Emphasis on altering the environment to achieve a
better person-environment fit - Enable person to respond with remaining
capabilities
37What criteria dictate whether visual impairment
will be addressed in therapy?
38What criteria dictate whether visual impairment
will be addressed in therapy?
- A whether visual impairment has caused a
limitation in occupational performance
39Goal is always occupational performance
- Only method changes
- Continue to provide occupational therapy treatment
40What is the purpose of the O.T. evaluation?
41What is the purpose of the O.T. evaluation?
- A To link the presence of a visual impairment to
a limitation in occupational performance
42List the professions that provide low vision
rehabilitation
43Professions Providing LVR
- Ophthalmologists
- Optometrists
- Orientation and mobility specialists
- Rehabilitation teachers
- Vision teachers
44Q What is the difference between low vision and
legal blindness?
45Low Vision
- A visual impairment severe enough to interfere
with occupational performance but allowing some
usable vision
46Legal Blindness
- Term coined by federal government to describe
visual impairment criteria qualifying persons for
benefits and services - Best corrected visual acuity of 20/200 or less in
the better eye or - A visual field of 20 degrees or less in the
better eye
47WHO Visual impairment Levels ( for medical
coding)
- Normal vision 20/20 - 20/30
- Near Normal 20/30 - 20/60
- Moderate impairment 20/80 - 20/160
- Severe impairment 20/160 - 20/400
- Profound impairment 20/400 - 20/1000
- Near blindness 20/1000 - 20/2500
- Blind no light perception
48What is the difference between low vision and
legal blindness?
49What is the difference between low vision and
legal blindness?
- Low vision describes the visual functioning of
someone for whom regular eyeglasses or medical
procedures cannot correct vision to within the
normal range - Legal blindness is eligibility criterion used to
qualify persons for services
50Low vision is primarily an acquired condition
- Most persons with low vision grew up, worked,
reared their families and retired as sighted
persons
513 diseases account for 90 of referrals to low
vision clinics
- Macular degeneration
- 60-90 of all referrals
- Glaucoma
- 13 of referrals
- Diabetic retinopathy
- 9, leading cause of blindness adults lt 50
52Disease Characteristics
- Age related
- One in four adults over 80
- Vision loss is permanent
- Treatment consists of management NOT cure
53Q What is the leading cause of low vision in the
US?
54Q What is the leading cause of low vision in the
US?A Macular Degeneration
55Q What population cohort makes up the majority
of people with low vision?
56Low Vision Demographics
- For persons over 70, vision loss ranks 3rd among
chronic conditions causing a need for assistance
in ADL - 2/3rds of low vision elderly have a secondary
chronic physical impairment that affects
occupational performance
57 Vision loss is
58 Vision loss is
59 Vision loss is
- A womans issue
- A race/ethnicity issue
60 Vision loss is
- A womans issue
- A race/ethnicity issue
- A socioeconomic issue
61Most older adults with low vision live in their
own homes
- 70
- The goal of O.T. is to help them age in place
62What population cohort makes up the majority of
people with low vision?
63What population cohort makes up the majority of
people with low vision?
- Adults over 65 years of age
64Q What two systems provide low vision
rehabilitation in the United States?
65Blindness System
- Well developed network of private, state and
federal services - Educational/vocational framework
- Primary service providers
- Rehabilitation teachers
- Orientation mobility specialists
66Reimbursement
- Private Sector
- Lighthouse, American Foundation for the Blind,
Jewish Guild for the Blind etc. - Veterans Administration
- 5 blind residential tx centers
- 3 blind rehab clinics
- 3 low vision rehab centers-VICTORS
67- State Vocational System
- Established with Rehabilitation Act of 1973
- Separate system for blind and visually impaired
- State commissions or divisions for blind
- 1978 amendment added independent living stream of
funding - 11 million dollars for entire US
68Health Care System
- Services reimbursed through medical insurance
- Requires physicians and licensed health care
providers - OT, PT, Social Services, Nursing, etc.
- Restorative not educational
- Service delivery not as comprehensive
69Prior to 1991
- Primary providers
- Ophthalmologists
- Diagnose and medically manage disease
- No rehab
- Optometrists
- Prescribed low vision devices
- No reimbursement for training
70After 1991
- HCFA ( now CMS) acknowledged vision loss as a
physical impairment - Enabled services provided by licensed health care
providers to be reimbursed by Medicare - Brought OT back into the field
71Current OT Structure in LVR
- No specific restrictions on treatment settings
- Can be provided in all settings covered by
Medicare and third party payers - Most programs are outpatient, hospital based
- Ophthalmology is the primary referral source
72- Older adults make up the majority of referrals
- Some programs see both brain injury and age
related diagnosis - Medicare is the primary payer source
73Healthcare vs. Blindness
- Consistent, adequate funding
- Adequate manpower
- Elderly primary consumer
- Widely distributed services
- Funding limited and often sporadic
- Manpower shortages
- Working age and children primary consumers
- Services limited to urban areas
74Challenges of treating elderly through either
system
- Elderly have multiple disabilities
- Complicates provision of services
- Professionals in blindness system are not trained
to work with other disabilities - Professionals in healthcare are not trained to
work with vision impairment - Low vision elderly often fall between the cracks
75Demand for OT services
- OT trained to address issues of aging and
disability - With specific training in visual impairment, can
meet the diverse needs of the elderly population - Creating potential great demand for services of
OT trained in LVR
76OTs entrance into LVR
- Not embraced with open arms by blindness
professionals - David vs. Goliath
- 2,500 vs. 85,000
- Has prompted traditional providers to seek better
reimbursement and standing - Optometry obtained physician status for medical
referral
77Medicare Vision Rehabilitation Services Act of
2001
- HR 2484
- Grants healthcare provider status to
- Orientation mobility specialists
- Rehabilitation teachers
- Certified low vision therapists
- OT status as independent provider is untouched
- Ties all referral to ophthalmology and optometry
78Q What 2 systems provide LVR in the United
States?
79Q What 2 systems provide LVR in the United
States?
- A Blindness and Healthcare systems
80What does the typical consumer of low vision
rehab look like?
81What does the typical consumer of low vision
rehab look like?
- 70 plus years of age
- Caucasian
- Female
- Widowed
- Living alone in her own home
- In an urban area