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Vision Rehabilitation Throughout the Lifespan. Working with Older Adults with Low Vision Chris Nelms, OTR/L, MLVR May 7, 2011. The Goals of Independent Living Skills Training with the Older Adult. Help them remain in their home safely and independently
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Vision Rehabilitation Throughout the Lifespan Working with Older Adults with Low Vision Chris Nelms, OTR/L, MLVR May 7, 2011
The Goals of Independent Living Skills Training with the Older Adult • Help them remain in their home safely and independently • Develop ways to use their remaining vision • Help then know how and when to use devices and strategies in addition or instead of their vision to do independent living skills • Safety
PERFECT FIT FOR LOW VISION OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY • Training in disability and aging • Ability to address physical, psychological, cognitive and social needs of clients • Safety assessments
Identifying the Challenges and Goals • Reading • Medicine Management and Health • Money Management • Home Management • Communications • Home Safety • Food Preparation • Personal care and hygiene
Education • Clients need to be educated about • The eye disease they have • The outlook for their future • The expectations of vision rehabilitation
Rehabilitation Strategies • Adapting the Environment • Lighting • Color and Contrast • Eliminate Clutter • Organize • Labeling • Magnification
Lighting • Appropriate lighting can make all of the difference to a person with Low Vision • Lighting is preferential you need to look at the glare and quality of light to see what works best for the client
Lighting • The closer the light is to the object the more intense and brighter it appears • Light should be directed towards what you are trying to see
Lighting • Incandescent bulbs are cheaper to buy, but use more electricity and are hotter • Fluorescent bulbs use less electricity and are cooler to use • Halogen bulbs use less electricity but are very hot • LED bulbs are the most efficient in their use of electricity and last the longest
Contrast and Color • High contrast makes it easier to locate objects • Use of bright colors against white or black background
Color and Contrast • Pouring coffee into a white cup and milk into a dark cup or glass • Cutting meat on a white board and chicken on a black cutting board • Using a towel of contrasting color on a light surface to find things
Labeling • Use tactile labeling • Bump dots, Braille, puff paint • Rubber bands, safety pins • Use large print labels • Use auditory labels
Magnification • Use larger print – enlarge on Xerox, buy large print books, write larger • Bring things closer • Use magnifiers • Hand held • Stand • Video
Magnification • The higher the magnification the smaller the field of view - Stronger isn’t always better • Each magnifier has its own length of focus and it is important to keep the magnifier that distance from what you are reading.
Resources for adaptive equipment • Maxiaids.com • Shoplowvision.com • Independentliving.com • LSSproducts.com
Maximizing Vision through Eccentric Viewing/ PRL • What is a PRL? • Preferred Retinal Locus • That area of the retina that the best visual acuity can be located on. • Learning to use another part of the retina to see takes training
Vision is more than 20/20 sight 20/20 sight only describes whether a person can read a letter 3/8 of an inch in height from 20 feet It does not tell anything about color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception or other visual skills that we use daily
Eccentric Viewing • Is training the client to point their eye in a different direction to see better • Is training the brain to understand what it is seeing with a different part of the retina
Maximizing Vision through Eccentric Viewing/ PRL • Determining near acuity • Evaluation of the PRL • Eccentric Viewing Training • Improving Reading Ability • Using it in ILS
Determine near acuity • Single Letter Acuity • Continuous Text Acuity
Evaluation of the PRL • Use of the Clock Method • Use of the Playing Card Method
Eccentric Viewing Training • Using PRL to see single letters or short words • Using PRL to see ILS items • Using PRL to see Faces • Using PRL with Optical devices
Improving Reading Ability • Retraining the brain to understand what it is seeing and how to look with the PRL • Starting with short words and good spacing and progressing • Starting at an appropriate size type and working towards their goal
Using PRL in Daily Living • Using PRL to see markings better rather than feeling for them. • Practicing using the PRL for watching television or when looking at friends or family
Medications • Large letter labeling • Organization strategies • Pill boxes • Auto refill through the pharmacy
Diabetic Education • Research shows that keeping the blood glucose at a stable level, will help reduce the diverse secondary effects of Diabetes
Talking Meters • Prodigy Voice • Prodigy Auto Code • Advocate • Advocate Redi-Code
Drawing up Insulin • Safe Shot • Count-A-Dose • Syringe Support • Insulin Pens
Safe Shot • Safe Shot (#80010) • Can use any syringe • Needs a sighted person to set it at the correct setting • Good for large doses of insulin
Prodigy Count-A-Dose • Count-A-Dose (#50166) • Used with 50 unit ½ cc syringes • Counts in 1 unit increments • Can be used with 2 bottles of insulin • Cumbersome to do large doses of insulin
Syringe Support • Syringe Support (#50113) • Used with 100 Unit 1cc syringes • Each rotation in 2 units of measure • Cumbersome to do large doses of insulin
Insulin Pens • Available by prescription only • Not available in all types of insulin • More expensive than regular insulin and syringes • Cumbersome to do large doses of insulin
Resources for adaptive equipment • Maxiaids.com • Shoplowvision.com • Independentliving.com • LSSproducts.com