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Low Vision Rehabilitation for Older Adults

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For persons over 70, vision loss ranks 3rd among chronic conditions that cause ADL limitations ... 1991, HCFA acknowledged that vision loss is a physical impairment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Low Vision Rehabilitation for Older Adults


1
Low Vision Rehabilitationfor Older Adults
2
What is low vision?
  • A visual impairment severe enough to interfere
    with occupational performance but allowing some
    usable vision

3
What is Legal Blindness?
  • A termed coined by federal government to qualify
    persons for services
  • 20/200 or less, best corrected acuity in the
    better eye or
  • 20 degree or less, visual field

4
Impairment Levels (WHO)
  • Normal 20/20-20/25
  • Near Normal 20/30-20/60
  • Moderate 20/80-20/160
  • Severe 20/170-20/400
  • Profound 20/500-20/1000
  • Near Blind 20/1001-20/2500
  • Blind-no light perception

5
Primary Low Vision Diagnoses
  • Macular Degeneration
  • Glaucoma
  • Diabetic Retinopathy
  • Together these 3 account for 80 of all referrals
    to low vision clinics

6
Disease Characteristics
  • Age related
  • Chronic and progressive
  • Vision loss is irreversible
  • Tx consists of management not cure

7
Low Vision Demographics
  • 2/3rd are over the age of 65
  • Most persons with low vision grew up, worked,
    reared their families, and retired as sighted
    persons

8
Low Vision Demographics
  • Incidence reaches 25-30 in adults over age 85
  • For persons over 70, vision loss ranks 3rd among
    chronic conditions that cause ADL limitations

9
Low Vision Demographics
  • 2/3rds of low vision elderly have a secondary
    chronic condition which impairs occupational
    performance

10
Low Vision Demographics
  • Vision Loss is a womans issue
  • Vision loss is a race/ethnicity issue
  • Vision loss is a socio-economic issue

11
Blindness System
  • Integrated as a system after WW II
  • Uses an educational/vocational model
  • Primary providers
  • Rehabilitation Teachers
  • Orientation Mobility Specialists

12
Service Providers
  • Private, charitable organizations
  • Veterans Administration
  • State Vocational Rehabilitation

13
Rehabilitation Act of 1973
  • Established state commissions/divisions for the
    blind
  • Amended in 1978 to add independent living skills
    training for older adults through title 7
  • Currently funded at 11million dollars for entire
    country

14
Health Care System
  • Services reimbursed through medical insurance
  • Prior to 1991 primary providers were
  • Ophthalmologists
  • Manage disease, attempt to prevent further vision
    loss
  • Optometrists
  • Prescribe optical devices

15
Critical Milestones
  • 1991, HCFA acknowledged that vision loss is a
    physical impairment
  • Enables reimbursement for services provided by
    licensed health care providers
  • On a state by state basis through the Medicare
    fiscal intermediaries
  • Brought O.T. into the field
  • May 2002, CMS issued a program memorandum
    extending coverage of rehabilitation services to
    beneficiaries with low vision

16
Healthcare vs. Blind System
  • B/S
  • Chronic funding and personnel shortages limit
    availability of resource
  • Children and working age adults are the primary
    treatment focus
  • H/C
  • Services are more widely distributed, funding is
    guaranteed
  • Elderly are the primary focus of treatment

17
O.T. as LVR Provider
  • Good discipline to bridge the gap
  • David vs. Goliath
  • 98,000 to approximately 2,500
  • Vision Rehabilitation Act
  • HR 2484

18
Normal Age Related Changes in Vision
  • Changes begin in the 4th decade
  • Become significant in the 9th decade

19
Reduced Visual Acuity
  • Static acuity
  • Decreases to 20/30-20/40
  • Prevalence 40 by age 70
  • Dynamic acuity
  • Decrease may be due to reduced OM control

20
Loss of Accommodation
  • A.k.a. presbyopia
  • Result of compacting of protein fibers in center
    of lens
  • Lens thickens and loses flexibility
  • Occurs gradually beginning in 40s
  • Creates need for bifocal

21
Floaters
  • Strands of protein which float in vitreous
  • Float more easily in old eye because vitreous is
    more fluid
  • More noticeable in bright light
  • Generally benign unless accompanied by bright
    flashes of light or significant increase in number

22
Dry Eyes
  • Lacrimal glands do not make enough or make poor
    quality tears
  • More prevalent in women
  • Can be exacerbated by medication
  • Causes itchiness, burning, decreased acuity
  • Treated with artificial tears or surgery

23
Increased Need for Light
  • Pupil diameter decreases
  • A.k.a. senile miosis
  • Lens thickens becoming more yellow
  • Combined-these two conditions reduce the amount
    of light coming into eye
  • 80 yr old person needs 10x as much light as an
    average 23 year old

24
Susceptibility to Glare
  • Lens and cornea become less smooth
  • Lens vitreous develop protein strands
  • Combine to cause light scatter
  • Increased discomfort and disability
  • Lose acuity under glare condition
  • Also takes longer to recover from glare

25
Reduced Dark/Light Adaptation
  • Takes longer to reform and store pigments
  • Never reach same level of dark adaptation as
    younger person
  • More difficult to go from bright to dark than
    dark to bright

26
Reduced Contrast Sensitivity
  • Caused by changes in color and density of lens
    and decreased pupil aperture
  • 75 year old needs 2x as much contrast as younger
    person
  • 90 year old needs 6x as much contrast

27
Reduced Color Perception
  • Caused by yellowing of lens
  • Decrease in sensitivity at violet end of spectrum
  • White objects may appear yellow

28
Reduced Visual Field
  • Changes in facial structure
  • Nose grows??
  • Orbit loses fat and eye sinks in

29
Reduced Visual Attention
  • Decline in ability to
  • Attend to objects in complex, dynamic arrays
  • Simultaneously monitor central and peripheral
    visual fields
  • Diameter of visual field decreases
  • 90 yr olds-40 have an attentional field of less
    than 20 degrees

30
Changes with Low Vision
  • Markedly reduced visual acuity
  • Markedly reduced contrast sensitivity
  • Reduced color discrimination
  • Visual field deficits
  • Intolerance to light and glare
  • Visual aberrations-metamorphopsia
  • Benign visual hallucinations-Charles Bonnet
    Syndrome

31
Macular Degeneration
32
Wet Form
  • Characterized by neovascularization
  • Blood vessels hemorrhage and destroy retina
  • Usually bilateral
  • Can be aggressive
  • Makes up 10

33
Dry Form
  • RPE cells begin to break down
  • Drusen develops on retinal surface
  • Often unilateral
  • Slowly progressing
  • Can be precursor to wet form

34
Both Cause Central Scotoma
Scar tissue forms over fovea
Image is blurred in area of scar tissue
35
Preferred Retinal Locus
  • Develops when fovea is destroyed
  • Development starts within 24 hours
  • Acts as pseudofovea directing fixation
  • Located in less sensitive retinal tissue
    requiring need for magnification
  • Person may not be aware of it

36
Medical Treatment Options
  • Wet form
  • Laser photocoagulation
  • Photodynamic Therapy (PDT)
  • Dry Form
  • No definitive treatment
  • Vitamin regimen for both
  • Zinc, E, lutein

37
Glaucoma
  • Chronic open angle
  • Drainage system clogs
  • Causes build up of intraocular pressure
  • Destroys optic nerve
  • Can lead to blindness

38
Treatment
  • Eye drops
  • Argon laser trabeculoplasty (ALT)
  • Surgical Trabeculectomy

39
Eye Conditions Associated With Diabetes
  • Premature presbyopia
  • Cataracts
  • Glaucoma
  • Paralytic strabismus
  • Corneal disease
  • Retinopathy

40
Diabetic Retinopathy
41
Treatment Options
  • Best treatment is prevention
  • Maintain blood glucose at 125
  • Pan retinal photocoagulation
  • Vitrectomy

42
Cataract
  • Opacification of the lens
  • So common that some degree of cataract is
    expected by age 70
  • Reduces
  • Acuity
  • Contrast sensitivity
  • Increases glare
  • Tx Intraocular lens replacement (IOL)

43
Homonymous Hemianopsia
44
Low Vision Exam
  • Focus
  • on use of remaining vision
  • CNS adaptation to vision loss
  • Four visual functions measured
  • Acuity
  • Contrast sensitivity
  • Visual field
  • Color vision

45
Acuity Testing
46
Contrast Sensitivity Test
47
Perimetry Testing
48
O.T. Evaluation
  • Identify strengths and weaknesses in patient
    performance
  • Assess CNSs ability to adapt to vision loss
  • Ability to locate and use PRL
  • Preferred retinal locus

49
Awareness of Scotoma
50
Scotoma Influence on Performance
51
Vision loss is a profoundly personal experience
52
Vision loss does not occur within a vacuum
  • Social context
  • Cultural context
  • Environmental context
  • Health context

53
Occurs slowly over a long period of time
  • Often difficult for person with vision loss to
    discern boundary between normal vision and
    beginning stages of impairment
  • Does not create a sudden crisis that must be
    immediately dealt with by family

54
  • Most important factor in a successful adjustment
    to vision loss is social contact
  • Needs at least one consistent quality contact

55
  • Older adults who lose vision want to continue
    activities that are important to them
  • Their ability to use compensatory strategies to
    continue valued activities is quite good
  • Families are often unaware that change is
    occurring until significant decline

56
  • Ability to continue a few activities can
    significantly improve or sustain quality of life
  • Rehabilitation outcome must be measured in two
    domains
  • Occupational performance
  • Quality of life

57
Identifying and Setting Goals
  • Client driven
  • Must meet Medicare requirement for medical
    necessity
  • Must fit into Medicare FI guidelines for
    treatment

58
Self Report Interview Format is Optimal
  • Observation of ADLs is too time consuming for
    outpatient setting
  • Self report gives person chance to establish
    priorities
  • Observation of a few key activities is necessary
    to confirm report
  • Some patients over or under estimate abilities

59
Treatment Approach
  • Maximize use of current visual ability
  • Teach person to use vision more effectively
  • Modify environment to facilitate use of vision
  • May be vision user and substituter
  • Multiple short term interventions often needed

60
The Older Adult and Driving
61
First, the facts
  • By 2020 there will be 40 million age 65 plus
    drivers
  • 30 million over the age of 75
  • Older adults use their cars for 90 of their
    travel

62
Safety Record of Older Drivers (2000-National
Center for Statistics and Analysis)
  • Older people made up 9 of the population but
    accounted for 13 of all traffic fatalities and
    17 of all pedestrian fatalities
  • Per miles driven, the fatality rate for drivers
    older than 85 is 9x as high as the rate for
    drivers 25-69 yrs
  • Older drivers are second only to teens in crash
    fatality rates
  • Most traffic fatalities involving older drivers
    occur
  • During daytime (81)
  • Weekdays (71)
  • Involved another vehicle (76)

63
High Risk Areas for Older Adults
  • Night driving
  • Urban and suburban intersections
  • Failure to yield the right of way
  • Failure to head traffic signs
  • Improper left turns
  • Freeways
  • Highway work zones
  • Older adults have the lowest proportion of
    intoxication of all adult drivers and pedestrian

64
  • In two vehicle accidents involving an older
    driver and younger driver
  • Vehicle driven by older adult was 3x as likely to
    be the one that was struck
  • 44 of these crashes both vehicles were
    proceeding straight at time of collision
  • In 27 the older driver was turning left
  • 6x as often as the younger driver

65
Driving Demands
  • Driver must see or hear the situation
  • Driver must cognitively recognize the situation
  • Driver must decide how to react to the situation
  • Driver must execute the physical manuever
  • Must complete this within miliseconds of time in
    a dynamic environment

66
Age Related Changes that Affect Driving
performance
  • Cognitive
  • Physical
  • Sensory

67
Cognitive Changes
68
Cognitive Changes
  • Dementia
  • confusion
  • Reduced visual attention particularly when
    confronted with complex, dynamic environments
  • Results in reduced scanning speed and incomplete
    scanning
  • Difficulty dividing attention
  • Difficulty ignoring irrelevant visual information
  • Slower retrieval and processing of information
  • Judgment
  • Make errors of omission

69
Physical Changes
70
Physical Changes
  • Reduction in neck/trunk ROM
  • Reduction in muscle strength
  • UE turning wheel
  • LE depressing gas and accelerator
  • Endurance
  • Coordination and dexterity
  • Reaction time

71
Sensory Changes
72
Sensory Changes
  • Vision
  • Dynamic visual acuity
  • Night vision
  • Glare recovery
  • Reduced contrast sensitivity
  • Reduced color discrimination
  • Reduced peripheral visual field
  • Hearing
  • Discrimination
  • Localization

73
  • Kinesthetic
  • Contributes to decreased dexterity
  • Vestibular
  • Affects ability to perceive motion

74
Independent Transportation
  • Provides older adults with the ability to meet
    quantity of life needs
  • And enjoy quality of life opportunities
  • Older adults dread the time when they can no
    longer drive their cars
  • Lose independence
  • Cannot use traditional forms of public
    transportation
  • Do not believe that there are other forms of
    transportation to meet their needs
  • In many communities their perception is correct

75
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76
Role of O.T.
  • Determine whether person should continue to drive
  • Recommend modifications to vehicle, driving
    approach to decrease accident risk and increase
    safety
  • Identify and provide resources for alternative
    transportation if driving cessation is necessary

77
Determining Driving Capacity
  • Driving history
  • Trigger questions
  • Do you drive?
  • Have you become uneasy about your driving?
  • What is it that bothers you?
  • Have you had any near misses?
  • What is it about other drivers that bothers you?
  • Answers predicting crash risk
  • Near misses
  • Irritation while driving
  • Change in driving ability
  • Self rating of driving safety

78
Determining Driving Capability..
  • Medical history
  • Diabetes
  • Stroke
  • Parkinsons
  • Circulatory problems
  • Heart disease
  • Hearing loss
  • Vision loss
  • Vestibular dysfunction

79
Determining Driving Capability
  • Medications
  • Functional performance
  • If uncertain about capability refer to
  • Certified Driver Rehabilitation Specialist

80
Vehicle Modification
  • Visibility
  • Mirrors, rearview
  • Control panel
  • Accessibility
  • Safety features
  • Air bags
  • Seat belts
  • Automatic locks
  • Keyless entry

81
Driving Cessation
  • DONT DUCK THE ISSUE
  • An important I-ADL
  • Not someones elses problem
  • In some states OTs have a legal responsibility
  • Be aware of your state regulations
  • Consider graduated driving
  • Most older adults self restrict already but may
    be possible to find safer routes or times

82
Driving Cessation
  • Be direct
  • Vague statements let the client dodge the issue
  • Listen to why the client needs to drive and offer
    alternatives taking into consideration the
    clients specific needs
  • Older adults are most comfortable riding with a a
    friend or family member or hired driver
  • Many older adults cannot use public
    transportation
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