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Votre centre de documentation sera exceptionnellement fermé de 12h30 à 13h ce lundi 18 novembre.
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Auteur Robert Kreiger |
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Participation and quality of life for persons with oculomotor impairments after acquired brain injury / Sharon Gowdy Wagener in The British Journal of Occupational Therapy, Vol. 82 Issue 8 (Août 2019)
[article]
Titre : Participation and quality of life for persons with oculomotor impairments after acquired brain injury Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Sharon Gowdy Wagener ; Robert Kreiger Année de publication : 2019 Article en page(s) : p. 475-484 Note générale : doi.org/10.1177/0308022619827262 Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Participation quality of life brain injuries visual perception Résumé : Introduction
Acquired brain injury is a major diagnostic group treated by occupational therapists. This study explored participation in everyday activities and social roles, and quality of life for persons with acquired brain injury-related oculomotor impairments.
Method
Using a cross-sectional descriptive approach, 40 rehabilitation outpatients with acquired brain injury-related oculomotor impairments underwent semi-structured interviews using self-report measures of visual symptoms (ABI Vision Questionnaire), quality of life (PROMIS Global Health Scale), and participation (Assessment of Life Habits). Descriptive, correlational, and simple regression statistics were used for analysis.
Results
Visual symptoms were significant for 96.7% of the participants. Physical and mental quality of life scores were one standard deviation below population norms. Participation areas identified as very difficult or harder for 82% or more included recreation, education, work, home maintenance, and volunteering. Approximately 68% or more identified communicating in a group, reading, computer use, and driving as very difficult. Correlations between scores of visual symptoms and participation, and visual symptoms and physical quality of life, showed significant moderate negative relationships. Regression analyses indicated visual symptoms explained about half the measured difficulties in participation.
Conclusion
Awareness of the activities and roles that are likely to be disrupted by acquired brain injury-related oculomotor impairments enables occupational therapists to direct therapy where it matters most. Findings highlight the identified symptoms and participation areas.Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=84617
in The British Journal of Occupational Therapy > Vol. 82 Issue 8 (Août 2019) . - p. 475-484[article] Participation and quality of life for persons with oculomotor impairments after acquired brain injury [texte imprimé] / Sharon Gowdy Wagener ; Robert Kreiger . - 2019 . - p. 475-484.
doi.org/10.1177/0308022619827262
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in The British Journal of Occupational Therapy > Vol. 82 Issue 8 (Août 2019) . - p. 475-484
Mots-clés : Participation quality of life brain injuries visual perception Résumé : Introduction
Acquired brain injury is a major diagnostic group treated by occupational therapists. This study explored participation in everyday activities and social roles, and quality of life for persons with acquired brain injury-related oculomotor impairments.
Method
Using a cross-sectional descriptive approach, 40 rehabilitation outpatients with acquired brain injury-related oculomotor impairments underwent semi-structured interviews using self-report measures of visual symptoms (ABI Vision Questionnaire), quality of life (PROMIS Global Health Scale), and participation (Assessment of Life Habits). Descriptive, correlational, and simple regression statistics were used for analysis.
Results
Visual symptoms were significant for 96.7% of the participants. Physical and mental quality of life scores were one standard deviation below population norms. Participation areas identified as very difficult or harder for 82% or more included recreation, education, work, home maintenance, and volunteering. Approximately 68% or more identified communicating in a group, reading, computer use, and driving as very difficult. Correlations between scores of visual symptoms and participation, and visual symptoms and physical quality of life, showed significant moderate negative relationships. Regression analyses indicated visual symptoms explained about half the measured difficulties in participation.
Conclusion
Awareness of the activities and roles that are likely to be disrupted by acquired brain injury-related oculomotor impairments enables occupational therapists to direct therapy where it matters most. Findings highlight the identified symptoms and participation areas.Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=84617 Exemplaires (1)
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