Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy

Abstract Background Vision influences functioning and disability of children with cerebral palsy, so there is a growing need for psychometrically robust tools to advance assessment of children’s vision abilities in clinical practice and research. Vision is a complex construct, and in the absence of...

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Main Authors: Belinda Deramore Denver, Margareta Adolfsson, Elspeth Froude, Peter Rosenbaum, Christine Imms
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-03-01
Series:BMC Medical Research Methodology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-017-0316-6
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spelling doaj-18b7126df5444e93ab8dc5e7e3ffc06b2020-11-24T22:06:42ZengBMCBMC Medical Research Methodology1471-22882017-03-0117111310.1186/s12874-017-0316-6Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsyBelinda Deramore Denver0Margareta Adolfsson1Elspeth Froude2Peter Rosenbaum3Christine Imms4Australian Catholic University, School of Allied HealthJönköping University, CHILD, School of Education and CommunicationAustralian Catholic University, School of Allied HealthMcMaster UniversityAustralian Catholic University, School of Allied HealthAbstract Background Vision influences functioning and disability of children with cerebral palsy, so there is a growing need for psychometrically robust tools to advance assessment of children’s vision abilities in clinical practice and research. Vision is a complex construct, and in the absence of clarity about this construct it is challenging to know whether valid, reliable measures exist. This study reports a method for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct. Methods Using the items from 19 assessment tools previously identified in a systematic review, this study used a two-phase process: first, deductive content analysis linked items to the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health - Child and Youth version (ICF-CY), and second, vision-specific ‘Activity’-level items were explored using inductive thematic analysis. Results The linking and content analysis identified that existing assessment tools are measuring vision across the ICF-CY domains of Body Functions, Activities and Participation, and Environmental and Personal Factors. Items specifically coded to vision at the Activity level were defined as measuring ‘how vision is used’, and these items form the basis of the conceptualisation that ‘visual ability’ is measurable as a single construct. The thematic analysis led to the identification of 3 categories containing 13 themes that reflect a child’s observable visual behaviours. Seven abilities reflect how a child uses vision: responds or reacts, initiates, maintains or sustains looking, changes or shifts looking, searches, locates or finds, and follows. Four interactions reflect the contexts in which a child uses their vision to purposefully interact: watches and visually interacts with people and faces, objects, over distance, and with hands. Finally, two themes reflect a child’s overall use of vision in daily activities: frequency of use, and efficiency of use. Conclusions This study demonstrates an approach to exploring and explaining a complex topic utilising World Health Organization language and building on existing research. Despite the complexity of vision, the concept of ‘how vision is used’ can be clearly defined as a measurable construct at the Activity level of the ICF-CY. This study has identified observable visual behaviours that may be developed into items assessing how vision is used in daily activities.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-017-0316-6Assessment ToolCerebral PalsyObservable BehaviourAssessment ItemVisual Ability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Belinda Deramore Denver
Margareta Adolfsson
Elspeth Froude
Peter Rosenbaum
Christine Imms
spellingShingle Belinda Deramore Denver
Margareta Adolfsson
Elspeth Froude
Peter Rosenbaum
Christine Imms
Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy
BMC Medical Research Methodology
Assessment Tool
Cerebral Palsy
Observable Behaviour
Assessment Item
Visual Ability
author_facet Belinda Deramore Denver
Margareta Adolfsson
Elspeth Froude
Peter Rosenbaum
Christine Imms
author_sort Belinda Deramore Denver
title Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy
title_short Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy
title_full Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy
title_fullStr Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy
title_full_unstemmed Methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy
title_sort methods for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct in children with cerebral palsy
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Research Methodology
issn 1471-2288
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Abstract Background Vision influences functioning and disability of children with cerebral palsy, so there is a growing need for psychometrically robust tools to advance assessment of children’s vision abilities in clinical practice and research. Vision is a complex construct, and in the absence of clarity about this construct it is challenging to know whether valid, reliable measures exist. This study reports a method for conceptualising ‘visual ability’ as a measurable construct. Methods Using the items from 19 assessment tools previously identified in a systematic review, this study used a two-phase process: first, deductive content analysis linked items to the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health - Child and Youth version (ICF-CY), and second, vision-specific ‘Activity’-level items were explored using inductive thematic analysis. Results The linking and content analysis identified that existing assessment tools are measuring vision across the ICF-CY domains of Body Functions, Activities and Participation, and Environmental and Personal Factors. Items specifically coded to vision at the Activity level were defined as measuring ‘how vision is used’, and these items form the basis of the conceptualisation that ‘visual ability’ is measurable as a single construct. The thematic analysis led to the identification of 3 categories containing 13 themes that reflect a child’s observable visual behaviours. Seven abilities reflect how a child uses vision: responds or reacts, initiates, maintains or sustains looking, changes or shifts looking, searches, locates or finds, and follows. Four interactions reflect the contexts in which a child uses their vision to purposefully interact: watches and visually interacts with people and faces, objects, over distance, and with hands. Finally, two themes reflect a child’s overall use of vision in daily activities: frequency of use, and efficiency of use. Conclusions This study demonstrates an approach to exploring and explaining a complex topic utilising World Health Organization language and building on existing research. Despite the complexity of vision, the concept of ‘how vision is used’ can be clearly defined as a measurable construct at the Activity level of the ICF-CY. This study has identified observable visual behaviours that may be developed into items assessing how vision is used in daily activities.
topic Assessment Tool
Cerebral Palsy
Observable Behaviour
Assessment Item
Visual Ability
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-017-0316-6
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