DEPRESSION, DISABILITY & REHAB IN VISION IMPAIRED ELDERS
Project Number1R01EY012563-01
Former Number1R01MH058165-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderHOROWITZ, AMY
Awardee OrganizationLIGHTHOUSE INTERNATIONAL
Description
Abstract Text
The proposed study builds upon current research addressing the inter-
relationships among chronic impairment, disability and depression in
later life and will make several unique contributions. The study's
focus is on subgroup of elders experiencing an extremely common age-
related disability, vision impairment, in which the rates of both
functional disability and depression are particularly high, but which
has received relatively little systematic research attention. The
longitudinal design will permit an in-depth examination of the course
of depression over time, utilizing a stress and coping conceptual model
which incorporates key personal and social resources as mediators of the
relationship between disability and depression. Most importantly, the
focus on a sample seeking rehabilitation permits us to empirically
challenge the assumption of inevitable, reciprocal decline in functional
and depressive status. By following the natural course of both
depression and rehabilitation service use, a primary long-term goal is
to examine the extent to which, and mechanisms by which, this non-
psychiatric intervention may influence depression status among disabled
elders. This knowledge will provide a foundation for future
intervention studies. The specific study aims are: 1. to document the
prevalence, course, and severity of depression among visually impaired
elders over time. 2. to examine the influence of depression on
utilization of vision rehabilitation services. 3. to examine the
mechanisms by which vision rehabilitation services may affect the
severity and course of depression. 4. to test a longitudinal model
explicating the interrelationships among vision impairment severity, co-
morbid health conditions, functional disability, rehabilitation service
utilization and depression, and how such relationships are
mediated by personal and social resources. 5. to examine gender
differences relative to aims 1-4 above.
600 elders (300 of each gender) will be sampled from applicants, age
65+, of a vision rehabilitation agency. Subjects will be assessed 4
times (at baseline, 6, 12 and 18 months) in order to examine both short
and long-term causal relationships among key variables. Analyses
address concurrent associations (cross-sectional) and prospective
relationships (longitudinal) using regression and structural equation
modeling (SEM) techniques.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
agingbehavioral /social science research tagclinical researchcomorbiditydepressiondisease /disorder etiologyfunctional abilitygender differencehealth care service utilizationhuman old age (65+)human subjectlongitudinal human studymental health epidemiologyperson with disabilityrehabilitationvision disorders
No Sub Projects information available for 1R01EY012563-01
Publications
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