Quality of Life with Macular Degeneration Is Not as Dark as It May Seem: Patients’ Perceptions of the MacDQoL Questionnaire
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Instruments
2.1.1. The MacDQoL
No. | Domain |
---|---|
1 | Household tasks |
2 | Personal affairs (letters, bills, etc.) |
3 | Shopping |
4 | Closest personal relationship |
5 | Family life |
6 | Friendships and social life |
7 | Physical appearance (clothes and grooming) |
8 | Physical activity |
9 | Getting out and about (e.g., car, foot, bus, or train) |
10 | Travel |
11 | Leisure activities (e.g., reading, TV, radio, gardening, hobbies) |
12 | Self-confidence |
13 | Motivation |
14 | People or society reactions to me |
15 | Feelings about the future |
16 | Financial situation |
17 | Independence |
18 | Doing for others |
19 | Mishaps or losing things |
20 | Enjoying meals |
21 | Time it takes to do things |
22 | Enjoying nature |
2.1.2. Smith-Kettlewell Reading Test (SK Read)
2.1.3. Semi-Structured Interview
2.2. Thematic Analysis Methodology
3. Results
Total | |
---|---|
Gender | 26 (100%) |
Male | 5 (19%) |
Female | 21 (81%) |
Mean Age | 82.0 (7.9 SD) |
Marital Status | |
Widowed | 14 (54%) |
Married | 8 (31%) |
Divorced/Single | 4 (15%) |
Living Situation | |
Alone | 18 (69%) |
With Spouse | 7 (27%) |
With Children | 1 (4%) |
Education | |
High School | 4 (15%) |
Some College to BA/BS | 16 (62%) |
Master’s to Doctorate | 5 (19%) |
Other | 1 (4%) |
Mean Years Diagnosed | 15.9 (11.4 SD) |
SK Read Mean (seconds/block) | 39.1 (39.2 SD) |
SK Read Mean (mistakes/block) | 2.6 (3.8 SD) |
3.1. MacDQoL Questionnaire
Domain | All Participants Rank | Weighted Impact | SD |
---|---|---|---|
Independence | 1 | −5.88 | 2.89 |
Personal Affairs | 2 | −5.73 | 3.89 |
Doing for Others | 3 | −5.42 | 3.23 |
Leisure Activities and Hobbies | 4 | −4.96 | 3.17 |
Family Life | 5 | −4.85 | 3.48 |
Do Physically | 6 | −4.77 | 2.94 |
Enjoy Nature | 7 | −4.73 | 3.48 |
Get Out and About | 8 | −4.69 | 3.25 |
Household Tasks | 9 | −4.54 | 2.67 |
Friends and Social | 10 | −4.38 | 3.19 |
3.2. Perceived Relevance of the MacDQoL
It’s interesting that these questions are asking the things that really are important to me, the things that I’ve always depended on that I find I can’t do anymore. Just right on the spot.—85-year-old woman
That’s a pretty good questionnaire.—84-year-old woman
I thought it was comprehensive and very thorough.—84-year-old man
All the questions are very, what can I say, very … to the point of what, how it affects us. I mean the questions you ask are all things that we encounter.—88-year-old woman
You know, you can do anything if you want to whether you’re blind or not. Uh, except drive.—64-year-old woman
My whole problem centers around driving. I’ve got friends that live in [town] and it’s just I used to go see them all the time and they work and it’s too hard. By the time they get off work, drive out here, get me, drive me back, you know. So you lose a lot of friendships. And to be able to take the kids to dance class or to be able to take the kids to karate or to be able to take the grandkids to the dentist or the doctor, go pick up this or go do that for my girls or the neighbor or whatever. If I could drive, yeah, it would make things a whole lot better. … like I said, it’s just the driving that drives me crazy. Because I don’t even mind not being able to see.—64 year-old woman
And once you take your driving away from you you’ve given up your independence if you can’t drive a car anymore.—85-year-old woman
I can type, I’ve always typed by touch but that and driving and recognizing people, in a way that’s a physical thing. Those are things that I can’t do anymore or can’t do them well and so that’s where my macular degeneration has profound impact on me.—84-year-old man
3.3. Impact of AMD on QoL Vis-á-Vis Domains of the MacDQoL
How has macular degeneration ruined my life? How has macular degeneration ruined my meals, ruined my shopping, ruined my enjoyment of nature? Well, it hasn’t really.—72-year-old woman
Oh, I’m sure [life] would be much better, but you just have to deal with what you have to do.—75-year-old man
… I love to learn, I love to see things and so I’ve really, really had to talk to myself. A lot of people are worse off than I am.
[I’ve] always had a book club and I’ve read many, many books but now when I go to the book club I’ll listen but I’m not comfortable there anymore. So I really have to push myself to go because it’s a good thing for me.
I haven’t always worn a lot of makeup, only when I go out, but I’ve always put lipstick and mascara on and of course I can put the lipstick on because I’ve done it so many years, just blindly putting it on. But that makes a difference when I go out.
I like to put nail polish on my fingernails but I can’t find the hole in the bottle. I can get the brush out but I can’t get it back in because I am going all around it and I’ve got fingernail polish all over the bottle.—Ms. Y, 82-year-old woman
When we go out for dinner it is a hard thing for me to use my fork to pick up salad. So I finally decided that I’d just have soup. I’ll have some kind of fantastic soup. I get along better with that than anything else.
I’ve always been a positive personality … if [society at large] doesn’t react, they don’t understand. I don’t let it bother me. For the most part, they’re very kind.
I pretty much do everything that I’ve done before [but] I have a lot of trouble doing the stuff … I would like to do a lot more things than I do, and I do quite a few of the things that I’ve always done, but it just takes forever.
There are days when I get really frustrated. And in my house I call it being pissy. It’s best not to talk to me.—Mrs. R, 72-year-old woman
With the help that I have I get by but it's a challenge, a big challenge, you know. It gives you a terrible feeling, one of insecurity. Then there’s the other part of making more work for [wife].In the past I took care of the bills and the bank account and all of those things. I did the driving, kept the car up and all that. I know what lies ahead and I know what’s happening now, but I would like to be able to handle it maturely and without being a problem to other persons. It’s always a big concern.—Mr. W, 84 year-old man
For me, getting out and about is very important. I get a terrible depression if I can’t get out. I’ve become very fearful about crowds and [public transportation].—Mrs. R, 72-year old woman
4. Discussion
Of course much better because you can’t do quite the same things you always did …—92-year-old woman
[Handling personal affairs would be] very much better. This is what I can’t do anymore.—85-year-old man
I cannot pull the whiskers on my chin and all the personal things that I used to do I can’t do now because I can’t see that well.—85-year-old woman
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
- National Eye Institute. Age-Related Macular Degeneration. Available online: https://www.nei.nih.gov/eyedata/amd.asp (accessed on 31 July 2014).
- World Health Organization. Global Data on Visual Impairments 2010. Available online: http://www.who.int/blindness/GLOBALDATAFINALforweb.pdf?ua=1 (accessed on 31 July 2014).
- Yonekawa, Y.; Kim, I.K. Clinical characteristics and current treatment of age-related macular degeneration. Cold Spring Harbor Perspect. Med. 2015, 5. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Ferris, F.L., III; Fine, S.L.; Hyman, L. Age-related macular degeneration and blindness due to neovascular maculopathy. Arch. Ophthalmol. 1984, 102, 1640–1642. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Yonekawa, Y.; Miller, J.W.; Kim, I.K. Age-related macular degeneration: Advances in management and diagnosis. J. Clin. Med. 2015, 4, 343–359. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Leonard, R. Statistics on vision impairment: a resource manual. Arlene R. Gordon Research Institute of Lighthouse International. Available online: http://www.gesta.org/estudos/statistics0402.pdf (accessed on 17 September 2015).
- Fletcher, D.C.; Schuchard, R.A. Visual function in patients with choroidal neovascularization resulting from age-related macular degeneration: The importance of looking beyond visual acuity. Optom. Vis. Sci. 2006, 83, 178–189. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Crossland, M.D.; Culham, L.E.; Rubin, G.S. Predicting reading fluency in patients with macular disease. Optom. Vis. Sci. 2005, 82, 11–17. [Google Scholar] [PubMed]
- Cunningham, S.J.; Garratt, A.M.; Hunt, N.P. Development of a condition-specific quality of life measure for patients with dentofacial deformity: I. Reliability of the instrument. Community Dent. Oral Epidemiol. 2000, 28, 195–201. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Scott, I.U.; Smiddy, W.E.; Schiffman, J.; Feuer, W.; Pappas, C.J. Quality of life of low-vision patients and the impact of low-vision services. Am. J. Ophthalmol. 1999, 128, 54–62. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Longworth, L.; Yang, Y.; Young, T.; Mulhern, B.; Hernández Alava, M.; Mukuria, C.; Rowen, D.; Tosh, J.; Tsuchiya, A.; Evans, P.; et al. Use of generic and condition-specific measures of health-related quality of life in NICE decision-making: A systematic review, statistical modelling and survey. Health Technol. Assessment 2014, 18, 1–224. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Tosh, J.; Brazier, J.; Evans, P.; Longworth, L. A review of generic preference-based measures of health-related quality of life in visual disorders. Value Health 2012, 15, 118–127. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Yuzawa, M.; Fujita, K.; Tanaka, E.; Wang, E.C.Y. Assessing quality of life in the treatment of patients with age-related macular degeneration: Clinical research findings and recommendations for clinical practice. Clin. Ophthalmol. 2013, 7, 1325–1332. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Mitchell, J.; Bradley, C. Design of an individualized measure of the impact of macular disease on quality of life (the MacDQoL). Qual. Life Res. 2004, 13, 1163–1175. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Mitchell, J.; Wolffsohn, J.S.; Woodcock, A.; Anderson, S.J.; McMillan, C.V.; Ffytche, T.; Rubinstein, M.; Amoaku, W.; Bradley, C. Psychometric evaluation of the MacDQoL individualised measure of the impact of macular degeneration on quality of life. Health Qual. Life Outcomes 2005, 3. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Fletcher, D.C.; Nair, U.; MacKeben, M.; Schuchard, R.A.; Schneck, M.E.; Watson, G. Smith-Kettlewell Reading Test (SK Read); Mattingly Low Vision, Inc.: Escondido, CA, USA, 2008. [Google Scholar]
- Braun, V.; Clark, V. Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qual. Res. Psychol. 2006, 3, 77–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Seiler, C. Republic of drivers: A cultural history of automobility in America. University of Chicago Press: Chicago, IL, USA, 2008. [Google Scholar]
- Finger, R.P.; Fenwick, E.; Pesudovs, K.; Marella, M.; Lamoureux, E.L.; Holz, F.G. Rasch analysis reveals problems with the multiplicative scoring in the Macular Disease Quality of Life Questionnaire. Ophthalmology 2012, 119, 2351–2357. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
© 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Ord, L.M.; Wright, J.; DeAngelis, M.M.; Feehan, M. Quality of Life with Macular Degeneration Is Not as Dark as It May Seem: Patients’ Perceptions of the MacDQoL Questionnaire. J. Clin. Med. 2015, 4, 1841-1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4091841
Ord LM, Wright J, DeAngelis MM, Feehan M. Quality of Life with Macular Degeneration Is Not as Dark as It May Seem: Patients’ Perceptions of the MacDQoL Questionnaire. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2015; 4(9):1841-1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4091841
Chicago/Turabian StyleOrd, Lisa M., JoAnne Wright, Margaret M. DeAngelis, and Michael Feehan. 2015. "Quality of Life with Macular Degeneration Is Not as Dark as It May Seem: Patients’ Perceptions of the MacDQoL Questionnaire" Journal of Clinical Medicine 4, no. 9: 1841-1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4091841
APA StyleOrd, L. M., Wright, J., DeAngelis, M. M., & Feehan, M. (2015). Quality of Life with Macular Degeneration Is Not as Dark as It May Seem: Patients’ Perceptions of the MacDQoL Questionnaire. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 4(9), 1841-1852. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm4091841