학술논문

Positive feedback loop between vision-related anxiety and self-reported visual difficulty.
Document Type
Article
Source
Ophthalmic Genetics. Aug2023, Vol. 44 Issue 4, p327-333. 7p.
Subject
*VISION disorders
*PSYCHOLOGICAL distress
*ANXIETY
*LOW vision
*RETINAL diseases
*DIABETIC retinopathy
Language
ISSN
1381-6810
Abstract
Patients with Inherited Retinal Diseases typically experience progressive, irreversible vision loss resulting in low vision and blindness. As a result, these patients are at high risk for vision-related disability and psychological distress, including depression and anxiety. Historically, the relationship between self-reported visual difficulty (encompassing metrics of vision-related disability and quality of life, among others) and vision-related anxiety has been regarded as an association and not a causal relationship. As a result, there are limited interventions available that address vision-related anxiety and the psychological and behavioral components of self-reported visual difficulty. We applied the Bradford Hill criteria to evaluate the case for a bidirectional causal relationship between vision-related anxiety and self-reported visual difficulty. There is sufficient evidence to satisfy all nine of the Bradford Hill criteria of causality (strength of association, consistency, biological gradient, temporality, experimental evidence, analogy, specificity, plausibility, and coherence) for the relationship between vision-related anxiety and self-reported visual difficulty. The evidence suggests that there is a direct positive feedback loop—a bidirectional causal relationship—between vision-related anxiety and self-reported visual difficulty. More longitudinal research on the relationship between objectively-measured vision impairment, self-reported visual difficulty, and vision-related psychological distress is needed. Additionally, more investigation of potential interventions for vision-related anxiety and visual difficulty is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]