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1From the Meera and L. B. Deshpande Centre for Sight Enhancement, Vision Rehabilitation Centres, and the 3International Centre for Advancement of Rural Eye Care, LV Prasad Eye Institute, Hyderabad, India; and the 2School of Optometry, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. The LVP-FVQ consisting of 19 items was administered verbally to 78 visually impaired Indian school children aged 8 to 18 years. Responses for each item were rated on a 5-point scale. A Rasch analysis of the ordinal difficulty ratings was used to estimate interval measures of perceived visual ability for functional vision performance.
RESULTS. Content validity of the LVP-FVQ was shown by the good separation index (3.75) and high reliability scores (0.93) for the item parameters. Construct validity was shown with good model fit statistics. Criterion validity of the LVP-FVQ was shown by good discrimination among subjects who answered "seeing much worse" versus "as well as"; "seeing much worse" versus "as well as/a little worse" and "seeing much worse" versus "a little worse," compared with their normal-sighted friends. The task that required the least visual ability was "walking alone in the corridor at school"; the task that required the most was "reading a textbook at arms length." The estimated person measures of visual ability were linear with logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) acuity and the binocular high contrast distance visual acuity accounted for 32.6% of the variability in the person measure.
CONCLUSIONS. The LVP-FVQ is a reliable, valid, and simple questionnaire that can be used to measure functional vision in visually impaired children in developing countries such as India.
Measurements in young children pose a special challenge. Clinicians often have to rely on parents completing questionnaires on behalf of their children (proxy responses), although questionnaires have been used with children providing the responses.12 A functional vision questionnaire consists of a list of questions related to the use of vision. The activities of children vary with age, and so it is difficult to develop a single instrument that can serve as a measure of childrens functional problems. Several internationally applicable instruments for adults have been developed13 14 15 16 17 18 and shown to be reliable and valid across countries.19 However, such an effort has been lacking for the pediatric age group.
In traditional ophthalmology practice, especially in developing countries, where eyecare practitioners are overloaded with patients, there is often very little time to explore the wide array of problems faced by patients. Visually impaired children are no exception to this. In addition, children have limited attention and some may not cooperate during an ocular examination or may get easily bored or fatigued. Distance visual acuity is often taken as the sole measure of a childs overall visual performance. Various studies have shown visual acuity to be inadequate for assessing problems with daily activities in adults.20 21 22 The same is probably true for children. All other measures of visual performance need an amount of patient cooperation that may not be possible with children, and the eyecare practitioner has to base his or her judgment on visual acuity or the ocular diagnosis to get a feel for the childs visual problems. Activities of school children range from self-care to being able to copy from the blackboard in class. Different activities involve different aspects of vision. Interventions targeted toward the specific needs of visually impaired children would enhance the quality of care offered to them. Use of a questionnaire to get self-reports on important daily activities that require vision may be one method of assessing functional problems of visually impaired children. In addition, it may be of value to assess childrens perceptions of their own difficulties compared with their normal-sighted peer group.
We developed a questionnaire to assess the self-reported functional abilities of visually impaired children: the LV Prasad-Functional Vision Questionnaire (LVP-FVQ). Because perceived ability is a latent trait, a latent variable analysis is indicated to measure the variable underlying the trait. We used the Rasch analysis for this purpose in the present study. Earlier, Turano et al.23 reported the use of the Rasch analysis to develop a questionnaire to assess the different levels of perceived ability for independent mobility in 35 situations in patients with retinitis pigmentosa. Similarly, Haymes et al.11 reported the use of the Rasch analysis for the development of the Melbourne low-vision activities of daily living (ADL) index, and recently Turano et al.24 used the Rasch analysis to estimate the interval measures of perceived visual ability for independent mobility in patients with glaucoma. In the present study, we describe the development and analysis of the psychometric properties of the LVP-FVQ, which was intended for use as a screening tool in developing countries.
| Methods |
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A 5-point scale (04) was used for the 19 items. A "Yes" or "No" response was first requested for each question. If the answer was "No," the response was recorded as "No difficulty," and the score for that particular question was zero. If the answer was in the affirmative, then the subjects were instructed to rate on a scale of 1 to 4 the level of difficulty they experienced in performing each task. They were told that 1 meant "a little difficulty" and 4 meant "unable to do the activity due to visual reasons." All items were scored in the same direction and in the same units. An additional response of "not applicable" was used, because some items such as threading a needle and lacing shoes tended to be gender specific. The "not applicable" data were treated as missing data for the Rasch analysis.
For the purposes of the Rasch analysis, however, we reversed the rating scale (0 was taken to be 4, 1 as 3, 4 as 0, and there was no change for 2) so that the measure and logit would have the same sign. We did not use the raw scores for statistical analyses, because they are not measures.27
Each subject had the nature of the study explained to him or her and was provided with standard instructions. The questionnaire was administered face to face by the first author to all subjects, away from their parents. The time taken to administer the questionnaire was 10 to 15 minutes. After administration of the questionnaire, the parents were invited to join the subject for the vision assessment.
Subjects
Seventy-eight visually impaired subjects were recruited for the study. All subjects were referred from the outpatient services of the L. V. Prasad Eye Institute (LVPEI) to the Center for Sight Enhancement for low vision management. The criteria for inclusion were: school-going child in any grade from 3 to 10, ability to perform standard clinical vision tests, visual impairment from any cause, and an ability to respond to the questions on the questionnaire. All the subjects could perform standard clinical vision tests. However, during the initial phase of the study, we had to raise the lower age limit to 8 years because we observed that subjects (n = 8) between the ages of 5 and 7 years had difficulty comprehending the questions; those children were not included in the study. Subjects with other impairments (such as hearing loss or intellectual impairment) were excluded from the study. Informed consent to participate was obtained from both the children and their parents, and the research was approved by the Queensland University of Technology Human Research Ethics Committee and the Ethics Committee for Human Research at LVPEI. The study was conducted in accordance with the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki.
The mean (±SD) age of the subjects was 12.8 ± 2.5 years (range, 818). The 78 subjects comprised 43 males (mean age, 13.4 ± 2.3 years) and 35 females (mean age, 12.0 ± 2.5 years). At presentation, using the World Health Organization (WHO) classification of vision loss,28 7 (9%) subjects were blind (<20/400 in the better eye), 22 (28.2%) were severely visually impaired (<20/200 to 20/400 in the better eye), 44 (56.4%) were moderately visually impaired (<20/60 to 20/200 in the better eye), and 5 (6.4%) were near normal or had no visual acuity impairment (
20/60 in the better eye). Fourteen (17.9%) subjects were sighted in one eye, but no subject was totally blind (no light perception in both eyes). Binocular high-contrast distance visual acuity for the subjects ranged from 0.12 logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR; 20/25-1) to light perception. The mean ± SD binocular high-contrast distance visual acuity was 0.92 ± 0.32 logMAR (20/160-1). There was twice the number of children (56.4%) with moderate visual impairment compared with those with severe visual impairment (28.2%). Only 9% were blind (visual acuity <20/400 in the better eye). These results compare favorably with earlier reports on pediatric low vision in India and Australia in other clinic-based studies.29 30 Thus, the demographics of the population in the present study are similar to that seen in most low-vision clinics.
The major causes of vision loss in the present study were retinal disorders (55%) that mostly included heredomacular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa; whole globe disorders (15%) such as microphthalmos, uveal coloboma, congenital glaucoma, and oculocutaneous albinism; and lens disorders (12%), including amblyopia secondary to aphakia. These causes are similar to results of a recently published hospital-based study of a pediatric low-vision population by Gothwal and Herse.29
A convenience sample of 25 subjects was asked to return to complete a repeat questionnaire after a minimum period of 1 day (mean, 21.5 ± 16.6 days; range, 146). The mean age of these 25 subjects was 12.8 ± 2.7 years (range, 918), and the mean binocular high-contrast distance visual acuity was 0.84 ± 0.30 logMAR (20/120-2), comparable with that of the whole sample.
Demographics and Vision Measures
The following demographics were recorded: age, gender, and cause of visual impairment as ascertained from the clinical records. Habitual (presenting) distance visual acuity was measured under monocular and binocular viewing conditions using a Bailey-Lovie letter chart and was scored as logMARs, using the per-letter method.31 Arbitrary logMARs of 2.50 were assigned for light perception and 3.0 for no light perception. Binocular near-vision acuity was measured using the Bailey-Lovie logMAR near word chart32 at 30 cm. A test distance of 30 cm was used because it was thought to represent a typical reading distance used by children with normal vision. Near acuity was recorded as the smallest print size at which at least three of the six words were read correctly and was scored in logMAR to the nearest whole line. As a part of the clinical assessments, other visual function tests were conducted, including color vision, stereopsis, and visual fields, but these were not used in any analyses.
| Results |
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If a persons perceived visual ability for functional vision performance is less than the required ability for that particular task, the probability of the persons rating the task in the "severe difficulty" category (rating 4) is high. In contrast, if a persons perception far exceeds the visual ability required for functional vision performance for a particular task, the probability of the persons rating the task in the "no difficulty" category (rating 0) is high. Hence, it is expected that the probability of using any particular rating category will increase monotonically with the difference between the persons perceived visual ability for functional vision performance and the visual ability required for the particular task.
Subjects rate the difficulty in performing the day-to-day activities, and in doing so they are actually judging their functional reserve. The Rasch model assumes that the probability that person n will assign response x to item i depends only on functional reserve. Functional reserve is the difference between the persons perceived visual ability
n and the ability required by the item
ithat is,
n -
i.34 35 The Rasch model is a model of the probability of using a particular rating category as a function of functional reserve. Rasch analysis allows us to estimate each patients visual ability
n, the required ability of each item
i, and the step measure (i.e., functional reserve threshold) for each response category, and it enables us to test the validity (accuracy) and reliability (precision) of the measurement of the construct (see Massof35 for a detailed description of the application of the Rasch model in measuring vision disabilities).
The person logit refers to the difference between each persons perceived visual ability
n and the mean item measure (
). If the person logit is positive, the persons perceived visual ability is higher than the average required visual ability for 19 items. If the person logit is negative, the persons perceived visual ability is less than the required visual ability. Figure 1 is a histogram of the person-ability logits. In our sample, estimates of the perceived visual ability (logits) for functional vision performance were not significantly different from a normal distribution (P = 0.059, Kolmogorov-Smirnov Z test). The mean ± SD of the distribution was 0.72 ± 0.60 logits, indicating that the perceived visual ability of our subjects was higher than the mean required visual ability of the 19 items.
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Figure 2 presents a scatterplot of visual acuity (logMAR) against the person measure. It demonstrates that there is a strong linear relationship between visual acuity and person measure (r = -0.57). Thus binocular high-contrast distance visual acuity could explain 32.6% of the variance in the visual ability person measure. However, there is very little variability in visual acuity among the subjects and the variance that exists in our subjects appears to be mainly measurement related and random. Hence, the testretest reliability on the person measures would be expected to be low. A close look at the scatterplot also reveals that LVP-FVQ is able to properly discriminate people of different (such as the extreme cases) abilities despite a poor separation index (Fig. 2) .
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) and, the item measure for each item (
i). The item measure
i corresponds to the visual ability required for that task and has the same sign as that of the item logit (because we reversed the rating scale). If the item logit is positive, the required visual ability for that item is higher than the mean required visual ability of all the items, and if the item logit is negative, the required visual ability for that item is less than the mean required visual ability. Thus, the most difficult item was reading a textbook at arms length, and the easiest item was walking alone in a corridor at school.
Relationship between the Person Measure and Global Rating of Vision
For an instrument to possess criterion validity, the instrument must be able to discriminate or predict against some gold standard. If our questionnaire is to be a measure of perceived visual difficulty, then the person measure should be able to differentiate subjects on the basis of their global rating of vision. One analytical tool for testing criterion validity is the receiver operating characteristic (ROC).36 We performed an ROC analysis37 on the person measures to determine the instruments discrimination ability based on the responses to question 20 (global rating of vision). Question 20 was not included in Rasch analysis. We computed the area (A) of the ROC curve for each group and then compared these values with chance performance (A = 0.5) to test for significance. The person measure discriminated all categories (A = 0.790.90, P < 0.05) except for those who answered "a little worse" versus "as well as" (A = 0.70, P = 0.25) which may be attributable to the small sample of subjects who answered "as well as" (n = 3).
| Discussion |
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The purpose of this study was to determine whether the LVP-FVQ could be used to determine perceived visual ability for functional vision performance in children with different levels of visual impairment. To accomplish this goal, we developed a patient-based assessment that, together with the Rasch analysis, allowed us to infer an underlying traitperceived visual ability. We determined a person score of perceived visual ability for each subject. The LVP-FVQ showed adequate content validity as demonstrated by separation indices (1.38 for person measure and 3.75 for item measure). The poor separation reliability for person measures could be attributable to the homogeneity of visual acuity in our sample (Fig. 2) . Construct validity of the LVP-FVQ was demonstrated by good MNSQ fit statistics. Despite poor separation reliability for person measures, the criterion validity of the LVP-FVQ was demonstrated by its ability to discriminate between subjects of different abilities (i.e., those who responded "seeing as well as their normally sighted friends," "seeing a little worse than their friends," and "seeing much worse" than their friends). The LVP-FVQ could be improved further by adding other questions such as those related to mobility in unfamiliar areas. The addition of items related to mobility would make the results of the LVP-FVQ more generalizable and would be useful to detect subjects with reasonable acuity but advanced peripheral field loss, such as those with retinitis pigmentosa and glaucoma. Further investigation of the new set of items using factor analysis to check for unidimensionality38 would be needed before these new items could be added.
Rasch analysis demonstrated higher reliability for item difficulty parameters (0.93) than for person ability (0.65). We speculate that the poor person measure reliability is related to the rating scale used in the present study. Our subjects tended to use the extreme categories of the rating scale (0 and 4) more often than the intermediate categories (1, 2, and 3; explained in detail later).
The results of the present study are similar to those reported by Massof and Fletcher14 in their evaluation of the NEI Visual Functioning Questionnaire as an interval measure of visual ability in low vision. They reported a high linear correlation (0.52) between visual acuity and person measure and demonstrated that items in part 2 of the NEI-VFQ could be used to estimate an interval scale of visual ability for patients with low vision. In the present study, the correlation between visual acuity and person measure was -0.57. This strong correlation between visual acuity and visual ability suggests that visual acuity is a major factor for the visually impaired children in their responses to the 19 items on the LVP-FVQ. A comparison between the two studies also reveals that the LVP-FVQ appears to be measuring an aspect (difficulty performing everyday activities) similar to that of part 2 of the NEI-FVQ.
Daily Tasks of School-Going Children Requiring the Most and Least Visual Ability
The hierarchy of required visual ability for the 19 items (Table 3) shows that the 4 most difficult tasks were all related to activities that require high resolution: reading a textbook at arms length, threading a needle, reading destination details of a bus, and copying from the blackboard despite sitting in the front row. All these are significant activities in schoolchildren.
At the easiest extreme of our difficulty hierarchy (those items that required least visual ability) were tasks of daily living, such as applying paste to a toothbrush, locating food on a plate, walking alone in the corridor at school, and walking back home at night, for which the subjects reported little or no difficulty. This implies that vision may not be as critical when subjects are required to do tasks that can be managed by other cues, such as tactual (locating food on a plate and applying paste to a toothbrush). Although we used a 5-point rating scale (04) in the present study, the subjects tended to dichotomize their responses. Response category 0 was used 22% of the time and category 4 was used 64% of the time with categories 1, 2, and 3 being used only 2%, 2%, and 6% of the time, respectively. The probability of subjects using categories 1, 2, or 3, was near zero for all values of person-item measure. These response categories were rarely used by our subjects and conveyed no information. Approximately half of our subjects (56.4%) were moderately visually impaired and we expected most of them to respond with "moderate to a great deal of difficulty" in performing the tasks, but they tended to dichotomize the responses (i.e., they answered with the most extreme categories). We speculate that it was difficult for the children to remember the four response categories. In addition, they may not have not been able to make judgments of scale (i.e., they either could perform the task or they could not, and if they could, they did not have any basis for deciding whether they had mild, moderate, or a great deal of difficulty, because they always performed the task that way). All these factors could have led to an infrequent use of the intermediate rating categories. Based on our experience we suggest that the rating scale of the LVP-FVQ could be modified to make it dichotomous and to further shorten the administration time. However, another study with a more heterogeneous (in visual acuity) and larger sample size is needed before such a recommendation can be made.
Role of the LVP-FVQ
There are several potential applications for the LVP-FVQ, the first being that it could be used by optometry and paraoptometry professionals with no low vision experience to identify children with visual impairment and either refer them to low-vision specialists or advise them on appropriate assistance. A second application for the LVP-FVQ is that it provides eye care professionals with a structured format for recording vision problems of children with visual impairment. Several investigators39 40 have expressed similar views in their review of visual function assessment questionnaires in adults. Third, it could guide planning of appropriate interventions. For example, in situations in which parents cannot afford to take their child to specialist centers for improved care, the primary eye care provider could make a recommendation to the childs teachers and school authorities for appropriate environmental modifications in the classroom. This would develop a rapport between the eye care provider and the teachers of children with visual impairment, thus helping to reduce functional difficulties. If the child is unable to cope with the visual requirements in the classroom or at home, the primary eye care provider could then refer the child to a low-vision specialist. Results from the LVP-FVQ could help to advise parents and teachers on simple interventions to improve the functioning of children with low vision. For example, in this study, 78.2% of subjects reported that they were unable to read their textbooks at arms length. However, only 39% of subjects reported being unable to read the blackboard from the first row. Simple and inexpensive interventions in the form of environmental modification, such as being seated closer to the blackboard in class, enabled a large proportion of subjects to perform well at board work. If children were encouraged to hold their books closer to their faces, they should be able to read because of the availability of ample accommodation in this age group. Such interventions to assist children with low vision can be achieved through parental counseling and providing recommendations to teachers to dispel myths with regard to the use of residual vision.
The LVP-FVQ also could be used as an adjunct to clinical measures in assessing self-reported functional vision. However, as has been demonstrated by Wright et al.,41 children may under- or overestimate their level of difficulty. One way of overcoming this problem could be to have subjects actually perform the required tasks in the presence of the clinical practitioner or investigator.2 That approach was not used in the present study because of the difficulty of simulating classroom conditions, such as light levels, and seating distance, among others. A questionnaire has greater general application among eyecare practitioners and educators than a more complex functional assessment of vision.
Although the LVP-FVQ is valid and reliable, it has a few limitations. All the subjects included were of school age and were under the care of the LVPEI. Their visual acuities were spread over a relatively small range (mean 0.92 ± 0.30 logMAR). They may not be representative of all children with visual impairment in the community, and selection bias could have occurred. However, the causes of visual impairment in the present study were similar to those in a population-based study conducted in the same part of the country.42 Little is known about self-reported problems with daily tasks in children. As in all studies that rely on self-report measures of disability, the possibility of reporting bias must be considered. The setting in which the questionnaire was developed may have had some influence on its content. Although the generalizability of LVP-FVQ items may be sufficient to allow cross-cultural use, this can only be confirmed by appropriate cross-cultural development work.
| Conclusions |
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| Appendix 1 |
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| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Submitted for publication December 4, 2002; revised April 18, 2003; accepted April 29, 2003.
Disclosure: V.K. Gothwal, None; J.E. Lovie-Kitchin, None; R. Nutheti, None
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Vijaya K. Gothwal, Centre for Sight Enhancement, Vision Rehabilitation Centres, LV Prasad Eye Institute, LV Prasad Marg, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India; colonel{at}lvpei.org.
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