Author:
Karadima Vicky,Pezaris Elizabeth A.,Pezaris John S.
Abstract
AbstractWith the advent of multiple visual prosthesis devices to treat blindness, the question of how potential patients view such interventions becomes important in order to understand the levels of expectation and acceptance, and the perceived risk-reward balance across the different device approaches. Building on previous work on single device approaches done with blind individuals in Chicago and Detroit, USA, Melbourne, Australia, and Bejing, China, we investigated attitudes in blind individuals in Athens, Greece with coverage expanded to three of the contemporary approaches, Retinal, Thalamic, and Cortical. We presented an informational lecture on the approaches, had potential participants fill out a preliminary Questionnaire 1, then organized selected subjects into focus groups for guided discussion on visual prostheses, and finally had these subjects fill out a more detailed Questionnaire 2. We report here the first quantitative data that compares multiple prosthesis approaches. Our primary findings are that for these potential patients, perceived risk continues to outweigh perceived benefits, with the Retinal approach having the least negative overall impression and the Cortical approach the most negative. Concerns about the quality of restored vision were primary. Factors that drove the choice of hypothetical participation in a clinical trial were age and years of blindness. Secondary factors focused on positive clinical outcomes. The focus groups served to swing the impressions of each approach from neutrality toward the extremes of a Likert scale, and shifted the overall willingness to participate in a clinical trial from neutral to negative. These results, coupled with informal assessment of audience questions after the informational lecture, suggest that a substantial improvement in performance over currently available devices will be necessary before visual prostheses gain wide acceptance.
Funder
William M. Wood Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference71 articles.
1. Donaldson, N. & Brindley, G. S. The historical foundations of bionics. In Neurobionics: The Biomedical Engineering of Neural Prostheses (eds Donaldson, N. & Brindley, G. S.) 1–37 (Wiley, 2016).
2. Lewis, P. M. & Rosenfeld, J. V. Electrical stimulation of the brain and the development of cortical visual prostheses: An historical perspective. Brain Res. 1630, 208–224 (2016).
3. Shepherd, R. K., Shivdasani, M. N., Nayagam, D. A. X., Williams, C. E. & Blamey, P. J. Visual prostheses for the blind. Trends Biotechnol. 31(10), 562–571. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tibtech.2013.07.001 (2013).
4. Lewis, P. M., Ackland, H. M., Lowery, A. J. & Rosenfeld, J. V. Restoration of vision in blind individuals using bionic devices: A review with a focus on cortical visual prostheses. Brain Res. 1595, 51–73. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2014.11.020 (2015).
5. Foroushani, A. N., Pack, C. C. & Sawan, M. Cortical visual prostheses: from microstimulation to functional percept. J. Neural Eng. 15(2), 021005. https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-2552/aaa904 (2018).
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献