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The World Health Organization (WHO) International Classification of Impairment, Disabilities, and Handicaps (ICIDH) system is used to classify the types of visual impairment.
This system, as the name suggests, is used to classify disorders, impairments, disabilities, and handicaps.
Impairment is defined as “any loss or abnormality in an anatomical structure or a physiological or psychological function.”
Similarly a disability is “any restriction or lack (resulting from an impairment) of ability to perform an activity in the manner or within the range considered normal for a human being.”
This places an individual in a handicap that is a person’s disadvantaged position in society due to an impairment or disability.
Visual impairment is defined as the limitation of actions and functions of the visual system.
The National Eye Institute defines low vision as a visual impairment not correctable by standard glasses, contact lenses, medication or surgery that interferes with the ability to perform activities of daily living.
According to the CDC and the World Health Organization the classification of visual acuity and impairment includes (1, 2) –
Types of impairment are different for different causes of visual impairment. In total vision loss for example there may be total darkness of the visual fields. Other types include visual impairment in glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration and so forth. (1-5)
This condition is due to the rise of normal fluid pressure inside the eyes. The type of vision is usually like a tunnel.
The intact vision remains in the center while progressively the peripheries start decreasing. The center of the tunnel reduces in size progressively till total vision is lost if left uncorrected.
A central area of woolly or cottony opacity obscures the central part of the vision.
The peripheries may be normally seen. AMD usually blurs the sharp, central vision that is needed for closely viewed activities like reading, sewing, and driving. This is a painless condition.
There is general clouding of the vision. As the whole eye lens is affected the blurring of vision may be diffuse until it is totally lost.
There may be other symptoms like photophobia – inability to see the light; diplopia – double vision etc. Cataracts are very common in older people.
Diabetes leads to damage of the smaller arteries and blood vessels at the back of the eyes over the retina.
Diabetic retinopathy is the most common diabetic eye disease and a leading cause of blindness in adults.
Usually vision impairment in diabetics begins as black spots or floating shapes that appear in the field of vision. Slowly complete vision may be lost if left unchecked.
Myopia or near sightedness or short sightedness means a person can see nearby objects clearly but distant objects appear blurred. High myopia may lead to vision impairment.
This is a genetic or inherited condition. Initially it manifests as night blindness.
As the disease progresses there may be a tunnelling of vision with loss of peripheral vision followed by complete blindness.
What is visual impairment?
Visual impairment Causes
Visual impairment Diagnosis
Visual impairment Treatments