Objective: To develop a novel age-appropriate measure of functional vision (FV) for self-reporting by visually impaired (VI) children and young people. Design: Questionnaire development. Participants: A representative patient sample of VI children and young people aged 10 to 15 years, visual acuity of the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) worse than 0.48, and a school-based (nonrandom) expert group sample of VI students aged 12 to 17 years. Methods: A total of 32 qualitative semistructured interviews supplemented by narrative feedback from 15 eligible VI children and young people were used to generate draft instrument items. Seventeen VI students were consulted individually on item relevance and comprehensib...
AIM To develop a short, enhanced functional ability Quality of Vision (faVIQ) instrument based on pr...
BACKGROUND:To assess cross-cultural validity between Dutch and English versions of the FVQ_CYP, a pa...
ObjectiveFunctional Vision (FV) is vital for the successful growth of children with visual impairmen...
Purpose: To develop age-appropriate extensions of a patient-reported outcome measure for capturing ...
Purpose: To report piloting and initial validation of the VQoL_CYP, a novel age-appropriate vision-...
Objective: To describe a child-centered approach to identifying content for a novel self-report ques...
Objective: Developmentally sensitive measures of vision-related quality of life (VQoL) are needed to...
Purpose Developmentally sensitive measures of vision-related quality of life (VQoL) are needed to c...
Aims To develop and validate a short questionnaire to assess self-reported visual ability in childre...
Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are increasingly becoming the gold standard for reporting ...
<br>Aims To develop and validate a short questionnaire to assess self-reported visual ability ...
PURPOSE - To develop a reliable and valid questionnaire (the LV Prasad-Functional Vision Questionnai...
The purpose of this article is to summarise methodological challenges and opportunities in the devel...
PURPOSE: Quality of life (QOL) instruments are increasingly utilized in ophthalmological research. M...
Objective: To explore feasibility of using child/young person patient-reported outcome measures (P...
AIM To develop a short, enhanced functional ability Quality of Vision (faVIQ) instrument based on pr...
BACKGROUND:To assess cross-cultural validity between Dutch and English versions of the FVQ_CYP, a pa...
ObjectiveFunctional Vision (FV) is vital for the successful growth of children with visual impairmen...
Purpose: To develop age-appropriate extensions of a patient-reported outcome measure for capturing ...
Purpose: To report piloting and initial validation of the VQoL_CYP, a novel age-appropriate vision-...
Objective: To describe a child-centered approach to identifying content for a novel self-report ques...
Objective: Developmentally sensitive measures of vision-related quality of life (VQoL) are needed to...
Purpose Developmentally sensitive measures of vision-related quality of life (VQoL) are needed to c...
Aims To develop and validate a short questionnaire to assess self-reported visual ability in childre...
Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are increasingly becoming the gold standard for reporting ...
<br>Aims To develop and validate a short questionnaire to assess self-reported visual ability ...
PURPOSE - To develop a reliable and valid questionnaire (the LV Prasad-Functional Vision Questionnai...
The purpose of this article is to summarise methodological challenges and opportunities in the devel...
PURPOSE: Quality of life (QOL) instruments are increasingly utilized in ophthalmological research. M...
Objective: To explore feasibility of using child/young person patient-reported outcome measures (P...
AIM To develop a short, enhanced functional ability Quality of Vision (faVIQ) instrument based on pr...
BACKGROUND:To assess cross-cultural validity between Dutch and English versions of the FVQ_CYP, a pa...
ObjectiveFunctional Vision (FV) is vital for the successful growth of children with visual impairmen...