Division on Visual Impairments

DVI Quarterly Volume 58(3)

A quarterly newsletter from the Council for Exceptional Children's Division on Visual Impairments containing practitioner tips for Teachers of Students with Visual Impairments, Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and other professionals.

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Cincinnati Children's Vision Rehabilitation Program Kelly E. Lusk, Ph.D., CLVT kelly.lusk@alumni.vanderbilt.edu The Cincinnati Children's Vision Rehabilitation Program (CCVRP) is an interdisciplinary pediatric low vision service delivery model that incorporates ophthalmology care, clinical low vision evaluations, educational recommendations, and follow-ups to provide a full continuum of care for patients with low vision who are ages 2-21 and their families. Based at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Terry Schwartz, M.D., and Rebecca Coakley, M.A., CLVT started the program in 2011, and later recruited Kelly Lusk, Ph.D., CLVT to design a research agenda and assist in securing further internal and external funding. Dr. Schwartz and Ms. Coakley hail from West Virginia where they have directed the Children's Vision Rehabilitation Program (CVRP) for the past 16 years. Dr. Lusk previously worked at Vanderbilt University with the Tennessee project, Providing Access to the Visual Environment (Project PAVE). CCVRP is modeled primarily after CVRP in West Virginia with additional elements, such as research, from Project PAVE in Tennessee. Along with the primary program, CCVRP also runs a related project devoted to children who have cortical vision impairment (CVI) and a physical disability, such as cerebral palsy. This 53

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