Bonnie A. Sturrock
University of Melbourne
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Featured researches published by Bonnie A. Sturrock.
Ophthalmic Epidemiology | 2013
Gwyneth Rees; David Mellor; Edith E. Holloway; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Mark T. Hegel; Robin J. Casten; Jing Xie; Eric A. Finkelstein; Ecosse L. Lamoureux; Jill E. Keeffe
Abstract Purpose: Depression is a common problem among people with visual impairment and contributes to functional decline. This article presents a study protocol to evaluate a new model of care for those patients with depressive symptoms in which psychological treatment is integrated into low vision rehabilitation services. Low vision staff will be trained to deliver “problem solving therapy for primary care” (PST-PC), an effective psychological treatment developed specifically for delivery by non-mental health care staff. PST-PC is delivered in 8 weekly telephone sessions of 30–45 minutes duration and 4 monthly maintenance sessions. We predict this new integrated model of care will significantly reduce depressive symptoms and improve the quality of life for people with visual impairment. Methods and Design: A randomized controlled trial of PST-PC will be implemented nationally across low vision rehabilitation services provided by Vision Australia. Clients who screen positive for depressive symptoms and meet study criteria will be randomized to receive PST-PC or usual care, consisting of a referral to their general practitioner for more detailed assessment and treatment. Outcome measures include depressive symptoms and behaviors, quality of life, coping and psychological adjustment to visual impairment. Masked assessments will take place pre- and post-intervention as well as at 6- and 12-month follow-up. Conclusion: We anticipate that this innovative service delivery model will lead to sustained improvements in clients’ quality of life in a cost effective manner and provide an innovative service delivery model suitable for other health care areas in which depression is co-morbid.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2013
Gwyneth Rees; Jing Xie; Edith E. Holloway; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Eva Fenwick; Jill E. Keeffe; Ecosse L. Lamoureux
PURPOSE To determine the relative importance and associated risk factors of vision-specific distress and depressive symptoms in people with visual impairments. METHODS In this cross-sectional study, 162 adult patients with visual acuity less than 6/12 were interviewed using telephone-administered questionnaires. Vision-specific distress was assessed with the emotional well-being scale of the Impact of Vision Impairment Questionnaire. Depressive symptoms were assessed with the Patient Health Questionnaire-9. Other measures including vision-specific functioning, coping, and social support were also assessed. Multiple regression and commonality analysis were used to determine the relative contribution of factors explaining variance in vision-specific distress and depressive symptoms. RESULTS Vision-specific distress and depressive symptoms were strongly associated. Vision-specific functioning (βs = 0.47, P < 0.001), avoidant coping (βs = -0.32, P < 0.001), social coping efficacy (βs = -0.17, P = 0.001), and depressive symptoms (βs = 0.18, P = 0.006) were significant determinants of vision-specific distress. Vision-specific functioning accounted for 37.7% of the unique variance in this model. Vision-specific distress was an important risk factor for depression, accounting for 36.6% of the unique variance in depressive symptoms. CONCLUSIONS Vision-specific distress is related to a persons ability to manage the practical and social challenges of vision impairment. Further work is required to distinguish vision-specific distress and depression and to examine what interventions are best to target vision-specific distress.
Patient Education and Counseling | 2015
Edith E. Holloway; Jing Xie; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Ecosse L. Lamoureux; Gwyneth Rees
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effectiveness of problem-solving interventions on psychosocial outcomes in vision impaired adults. METHODS A systematic search of randomised controlled trials (RCTs), published between 1990 and 2013, that investigated the impact of problem-solving interventions on depressive symptoms, emotional distress, quality of life (QoL) and functioning was conducted. Two reviewers independently selected and appraised study quality. Data permitting, intervention effects were statistically pooled and meta-analyses were performed, otherwise summarised descriptively. RESULTS Eleven studies (reporting on eight trials) met inclusion criteria. Pooled analysis showed problem-solving interventions improved vision-related functioning (standardised mean change [SMC]: 0.15; 95% CI: 0.04-0.27) and emotional distress (SMC: -0.36; 95% CI: -0.54 to -0.19). There was no evidence to support improvements in depressive symptoms (SMC: -0.27, 95% CI: -0.66 to 0.12) and insufficient evidence to determine the effectiveness of problem-solving interventions on QoL. CONCLUSION The small number of well-designed studies and narrow inclusion criteria limit the conclusions drawn from this review. However, problem-solving skills may be important for nurturing daily functioning and reducing emotional distress for adults with vision impairment. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Given the empirical support for the importance of effective problem-solving skills in managing chronic illness, more well-designed RCTs are needed with diverse vision impaired samples.
JAMA Ophthalmology | 2016
Gwyneth Rees; Jing Xie; Eva Fenwick; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Robert P. Finger; Sophie Rogers; Lyndell Lim; Ecosse L. Lamoureux
IMPORTANCE This study is needed to clarify inconsistent findings regarding the association between diabetes-related eye complications and psychological well-being. OBJECTIVE To examine the association between severity of diabetic retinopathy (DR) and diabetic macular edema (DME) with symptoms of depression and anxiety in adults with diabetes. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A cross-sectional study was conducted in a tertiary eye hospital in Melbourne, Australia. The study comprised 519 participants with diabetes. The median duration of diabetes was 13.0 (interquartile range, 14.0) years. The study was conducted from March 1, 2009, to December 24, 2010. EXPOSURES Patients underwent a comprehensive eye examination in which dilated fundus photographs (disc and macula centered) were obtained and graded for the presence and severity of DR and DME. Presenting distance uniocular and binocular visual acuity were assessed using a 3-m logMAR chart. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Symptoms of depression and anxiety were measured using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), which comprises 7 questions specific to anxiety and 7 specific to depression with scores ranging from 0 to 21; scores higher than 8 signify possible anxiety or depression. The ordinal raw scores of the HADS questionnaire were transformed to estimates of interval measure using Rasch analysis and evaluated as continuous variables. Participants also completed standardized interview-administered questionnaires. Blood samples were assessed for hemoglobin A1c, fasting blood glucose, and serum lipids. Multiple linear regression models were used to determine the associations between the severity of DR and DME with symptoms of anxiety and depression and commonality analysis was used to quantify the unique variance explained. RESULTS Of the 519 participants in the study, 170 individuals (32.8%) were female; mean (SD) age was 64.9 (11.6) years. Raw scores indicated that 80 individuals (15.4%) screened positive for depressive symptoms and 118 persons (22.7%) screened positive for symptoms of anxiety. In multivariate analysis using Rasch scores, severe nonproliferative DR (NPDR)/PDR was independently associated with greater depressive symptoms (regression coefficient [β] = 0.69; 95% CI, 0.03-1.34) after controlling for sociodemographic factors and clinical characteristics, including visual acuity. A history of depression or anxiety accounted for 60.6% (95% CI, 23.9%-83.2%) of the unique variance in depressive symptoms, and severe NPDR or PDR contributed to 19.1% (95% CI, 1.7%-44.4%) of the total explained variance of depressive symptoms. Diabetic macular edema was not associated with depressive symptoms. No association between DR and symptoms of anxiety was identified. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Severe NPDR or PDR, but not DME, was independently associated with depressive symptoms. The severity of DR could be an indicator to prompt monitoring of depression in at-risk individuals with diabetes. Further work is required to replicate these findings and determine the clinical significance of the association.
Journal of Health Psychology | 2015
Gwyneth Rees; Ecosse L. Lamoureux; Jing Xie; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Eva Fenwick
This study used Rasch analysis to examine the psychometric validity of the Illness Perception Questionnaire–Revised to assess beliefs about diabetes in 470 participants with Type 2 diabetes and 71 participants with Type 1 diabetes. All Illness Perception Questionnaire–Revised scales had psychometric issues, which included poorly utilised response categories, poor scale precision and multidimensionality. Following re-engineering, only four of the eight scales (Consequences, Illness coherence, Timeline cyclical and Emotional representations) were psychometrically adequate according to the Rasch model. The diabetes-specific version of the Illness Perception Questionnaire–Revised provides suboptimal assessment of beliefs held by patients with diabetes.
Australasian Journal on Ageing | 2015
Edith E. Holloway; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Ecosse L. Lamoureux; Jill E. Keeffe; Gwyneth Rees
To investigate characteristics associated with screening positive for depressive symptoms among older adults accessing low‐vision rehabilitation and eye‐care services and to determine client acceptability of depression screening using the Patient Health Questionnaire‐2 (PHQ‐2) in these settings.
Personality and Mental Health | 2014
Bonnie A. Sturrock; David Mellor
Contemporary theories of borderline personality disorder (BPD) have detailed the functional importance of emotional invalidation in meaningful relationships as an aetiological and perpetuating factor of its core disturbances. The purpose of our study was to test aspects of Linehans (1993) biosocial and Fruzzetti (1996) and Fruzzetti, Shenk, and Hoffmans (2005) validation/invalidation family interactions transactional theories in a community sample of 186 participants. Results indicated that a multi-mediational path model of invalidation in meaningful relationships, emotion dysregulation, poor distress tolerance and BPD symptoms provided a perfect fit to the data and accounted for a substantial amount of variance in BPD (38%). The results provided support for these complimentary theories of BPD, which hold promise for clinical applications and future research.
BMJ open diabetes research & care | 2017
Gwyneth Rees; Fleur O'Hare; Marian Saeed; Bronwyn Sudholz; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Jing Xie; Jane Speight; Ecosse L. Lamoureux
Objective To provide preliminary evidence for the impact of problem-solving therapy for diabetes (PST-D) in adults with diabetic retinopathy (DR) and diabetes distress. Research design and methods In a pilot randomized controlled trial, 40 participants with DR and diabetes distress were allocated to the PST-D or control groups. Diabetes distress (DDS), depressive symptoms (PHQ-9), self-care activities (SDSCA), and HbA1c were assessed at baseline, and 3 and 6-month follow-ups. Results At the 6-month follow-up, the PST-D group showed significant improvements relative to the control group, in ‘regimen-related distress’ (PST-D: −1.3±1.4; control: −0.4±1.1), depressive symptoms (PST-D: −4.3±6.1; control: −0.3±4.6), and HbA1c (PST-D: −1.2%±1.01; control: 0.2%±1.2%) (all p<0.05). In multiple regression analysis, adjusting for baseline values and sociodemographic factors, PST-D was associated with significant improvement in ‘regimen-related distress’, depressive symptoms, and HbA1c at the 6-month follow-up (p<0.05). Conclusions PST-D is a promising intervention for improving psychological outcomes and glycemic control. A fully powered study is required to confirm these findings and examine mechanisms of change in HbA1c. Trial registration number ACTRN12616001010482; results.
Australian Journal of Primary Health | 2015
Edith E. Holloway; Bonnie A. Sturrock; Ecosse L. Lamoureux; Jill E. Keeffe; Gwyneth Rees
Adults with vision impairment commonly experience depression; however, depression often remains undetected and therefore untreated in this group. Using a prospective longitudinal design, the aim of this study was to determine the rate of uptake for a referral to a general practitioner (GP), in vision-impaired adults, who were screened for depression in low vision rehabilitation and eye-care settings. Fifty-seven vision-impaired adults (aged ≥ 18 years) were recruited from low vision rehabilitation centres across Australia and the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, between June 2010 and May 2012. Participants screened positive for depressive symptoms and were referred to their GP for follow up. Telephone assessments took place at baseline, 3 and 6 months to determine uptake of a GP referral and changes in depressive symptoms over 6 months. Forty-six per cent of participants followed through with the GP referral. A desire for emotional support and stigma towards seeking support from a psychologist were significantly associated with uptake (both P < 0.05). GPs were more likely to recommend anti-depressant medication compared with a psychologist consultation (69% v. 54%) and patients themselves were more likely to take anti-depressant medication (94% v. 14% who saw a psychologist). Depressive symptoms decreased significantly over 6 months for those who followed through with a GP referral (baseline M = 10.04, s.d. = 5.76 v. 6-months M = 6.20, s.d. = 3.38; z = -2.26, P = 0.02) but not for those who did not use the GP referral (z = -1.92, P = 0.55). This method of referral to a GP following depression screening may provide an effective pathway to detect and manage depression in vision-impaired adults.
British Journal of Visual Impairment | 2016
Bonnie A. Sturrock; Edith E. Holloway; Jill Keefe; Mark T. Hegel; Robin J. Casten; David Mellor; Gwyneth Rees
Vision rehabilitation staff were trained to deliver problem-solving therapy for primary care (PST-PC) over the telephone to adults with depressive symptoms and low vision. Training was a 2-day workshop, completion of training cases, and assessment of treatment fidelity. Staff perspectives of training and challenges in PST-PC delivery were explored. Telephone-administered semi-structured interviews were conducted pre- and post-workshop and following PST-PC competency. In all, 14 staff (mean age = 47.64 years, SD = 12.68 years, 93% females) achieved competency and 6 withdrew. Results showed an increased understanding of PST-PC from pre- to post-workshop (Z = −2.71, p = .007) and pre-workshop to post-competency (Z = −3.09, p = .002). A high level of satisfaction with training was reported. Staff challenges included the clients’ ability to define problems and brainstorm solutions. Training enabled staff to competently deliver PST-PC and may serve as a model for integrating depression care into vision rehabilitation services recommended by international guidelines.