Visually impaired children: “coming to better terms”

被引:0
|
作者
Frans C. C. Riemslag
机构
[1] Bartiméus Institute for the Visually Impaired,
[2] Royal Visio,undefined
[3] National Foundation for the Visually Impaired and Blind,undefined
来源
Documenta Ophthalmologica | 2009年 / 119卷
关键词
Albinism; Congenital stationary night blindness; ERG; VEP; Low vision rehabilitation; WHO international classification of functioning (ICF);
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
For a visually impaired child, the accurate establishment of the diagnosis provides information on the prognosis of his or her participation possibilities, including expectations about the need for care, and provides the basis for informed genetic counseling. To maximize the diagnostic value of electrophysiological testing, we use extensions of the standard ISCEV (International Society for Electrophysiology in Vision) protocols for both the ERG (electroretinogram) and the VEP (visual evoked potential). An overview of 3 years’ practice of the Department of Ophthalmology of Bartiméus, presented at ISCEV in Glasgow, showed that, as a result of our electrophysiological assessment, in about 10% of the cases the diagnosis at referral had to be changed from a progressive to a stationary disorder or the reverse. It is obvious that these parameters drastically change the strategy to attain “coming to terms with the disorder”. It turns out that for the visually impaired child or his or her parents as well as for the professionals in the rehabilitation institutes, the terminology used to describe a disorder can be unnecessarily alarming rather than comprehensible or even realistic. Terminology needs to be clear and understandable, with a clearcut distinction between the description of visual functions and the name of a disorder. In albinism, the bad connotation of the name of this disorder together with the finding of non-albinos with misrouting and definite albinos without it forces us to reconsider the nomenclature. With congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB), the finding of youngsters who are clearly capable of mobility at night and the fact that the term night blindness refers to a function instead of a disorder forces us even more to reconsider nomenclature.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 7
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] NORDIC REGISTERS OF VISUALLY-IMPAIRED CHILDREN
    RIISE, R
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL MEDICINE, 1993, 21 (02): : 66 - 68
  • [42] Recognizing Sleep Disorders in Visually Impaired Children
    Wagner, Rudolph S.
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC OPHTHALMOLOGY & STRABISMUS, 2022, 59 (02) : 72 - 72
  • [43] WORKING WITH VISUALLY-IMPAIRED CHILDREN AND THEIR FAMILIES
    MOLLER, MA
    PEDIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 1993, 40 (04) : 881 - 890
  • [46] EYE-PRESSING BY VISUALLY IMPAIRED CHILDREN
    JAN, JE
    FREEMAN, RD
    MCCORMICK, AQ
    SCOTT, EP
    ROBERTSON, WD
    NEWMAN, DE
    DEVELOPMENTAL MEDICINE AND CHILD NEUROLOGY, 1983, 25 (06): : 755 - 762
  • [47] Interactions between visually impaired mothers and their children
    Gosme, C.
    Benony, C.
    Golse, B.
    Candilis, D.
    Thoueille, E.
    Soule, M.
    INFANT MENTAL HEALTH JOURNAL, 2010, 31 (03) : 66 - 66
  • [48] A Tangible Math Game for Visually Impaired Children
    Pires, Ana Cristina
    Marichal, Sebastian
    Gonzalez-Perilli, Fernando
    Bakala, Ewelina
    Fleischer, Bruno
    Sansone, Gustavo
    Guerreiro, Tiago
    ASSETS'19: THE 21ST INTERNATIONAL ACM SIGACCESS CONFERENCE ON COMPUTERS AND ACCESSIBILITY, 2019, : 670 - 672
  • [50] Prevalence of psychiatric morbidity in visually impaired children
    Ajay Kumar Bakhla
    Vinod Kumar Sinha
    Vijay Verma
    Sujit Sarkhel
    Indian Pediatrics, 2011, 48 : 225 - 227