USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)

Eye: Questionnaire-based Vision Screening (EyeQVS) is a 21-item questionnaire designed to screen for reduced vision, visual field defects, binocular disorders, dry eye, postural ergonomic problems and computer vision syndrome. EyeQVS offer an online and equipment-free vision screening option. The pu...

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Published in:Journal of Health and Translational Medicine
Main Author: Ah C.; Sa R.; A A.; N C.; B M.; Chen A.-H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85175049918&doi=10.22452%2fjummec.sp2023no2.52&partnerID=40&md5=516b0c1371755b84b0301184836ce9c3
id 2-s2.0-85175049918
spelling 2-s2.0-85175049918
Ah C.; Sa R.; A A.; N C.; B M.; Chen A.-H.
USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
2023
Journal of Health and Translational Medicine
26
Special Issue 2
10.22452/jummec.sp2023no2.52
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85175049918&doi=10.22452%2fjummec.sp2023no2.52&partnerID=40&md5=516b0c1371755b84b0301184836ce9c3
Eye: Questionnaire-based Vision Screening (EyeQVS) is a 21-item questionnaire designed to screen for reduced vision, visual field defects, binocular disorders, dry eye, postural ergonomic problems and computer vision syndrome. EyeQVS offer an online and equipment-free vision screening option. The purpose of this research is evaluating both usability and validity of EyeQVS. The testability was surveyed using grading scales and the experience was investigated using structured and open-ended questions. Each target ocular condition of EyeQVS was compared to the full eye examination. Method: In the usability investigation of EyeQVS, two modes were employed [selfadministration (fifty-two self-respondents cum patients) and proxy-administration (ten proxy-respondents for sixty-two patients) modes] in screening for vision problems. In the validation investigation, fifty-two subjects were recruited using convenient sampling to check the accuracy of EyeQVS. Each subject was screened with EyeQVS before undergoing a comprehensive eye examination. Results: All respondents indicated high confidence towards EyeQVS with an average of more than 8 points on the Likert scale score. The majority found it easy to use and navigate. Respondents also adored the short duration required to complete the vision screening. The Chi-square of the Independence Test revealed that the designated components of EyeQVS had a good relationship with respective clinical tests (p < 0.05). Conclusion: EyeQVS exhibits workable user satisfaction and operative validation from the full eye examination findings. EyeQVS provides alternative online easy access to preventive eye care. EyeQVS is pragmatic for vision screening implementation in locations where equipment-based screening is not feasible. It is also suitable for vulnerable communities needing special care, support or protection because of age, disability, poverty or accessibility issues. © 2023, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya. All rights reserved.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya
18237339
English
Article

author Ah C.; Sa R.; A A.; N C.; B M.; Chen A.-H.
spellingShingle Ah C.; Sa R.; A A.; N C.; B M.; Chen A.-H.
USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
author_facet Ah C.; Sa R.; A A.; N C.; B M.; Chen A.-H.
author_sort Ah C.; Sa R.; A A.; N C.; B M.; Chen A.-H.
title USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
title_short USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
title_full USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
title_fullStr USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
title_full_unstemmed USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
title_sort USABILITY AND VALIDATION OF EYE QUESTIONNAIREBASED VISION SCREENING (EYEQVS)
publishDate 2023
container_title Journal of Health and Translational Medicine
container_volume 26
container_issue Special Issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.22452/jummec.sp2023no2.52
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85175049918&doi=10.22452%2fjummec.sp2023no2.52&partnerID=40&md5=516b0c1371755b84b0301184836ce9c3
description Eye: Questionnaire-based Vision Screening (EyeQVS) is a 21-item questionnaire designed to screen for reduced vision, visual field defects, binocular disorders, dry eye, postural ergonomic problems and computer vision syndrome. EyeQVS offer an online and equipment-free vision screening option. The purpose of this research is evaluating both usability and validity of EyeQVS. The testability was surveyed using grading scales and the experience was investigated using structured and open-ended questions. Each target ocular condition of EyeQVS was compared to the full eye examination. Method: In the usability investigation of EyeQVS, two modes were employed [selfadministration (fifty-two self-respondents cum patients) and proxy-administration (ten proxy-respondents for sixty-two patients) modes] in screening for vision problems. In the validation investigation, fifty-two subjects were recruited using convenient sampling to check the accuracy of EyeQVS. Each subject was screened with EyeQVS before undergoing a comprehensive eye examination. Results: All respondents indicated high confidence towards EyeQVS with an average of more than 8 points on the Likert scale score. The majority found it easy to use and navigate. Respondents also adored the short duration required to complete the vision screening. The Chi-square of the Independence Test revealed that the designated components of EyeQVS had a good relationship with respective clinical tests (p < 0.05). Conclusion: EyeQVS exhibits workable user satisfaction and operative validation from the full eye examination findings. EyeQVS provides alternative online easy access to preventive eye care. EyeQVS is pragmatic for vision screening implementation in locations where equipment-based screening is not feasible. It is also suitable for vulnerable communities needing special care, support or protection because of age, disability, poverty or accessibility issues. © 2023, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya. All rights reserved.
publisher Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya
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language English
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