Here’s a very extensive & HOPE-full video (50 minutes) “Summary of Research & Developments – 2016” from June 2016 presented by Dr. Dan Roberts, Director of MD Support (mdsupport.org)
Click here for the printed transcript
My Macular Degeneration Journey/Journal
From Diagnosis to Decision – June 2023 Since Sue has not written any new journal pages for some time, the site has been archived until we can decide if the work necessary to make sure all information is accurate and up-to-date can be made. In the meantime, you'll get some pages 'not found' or 'private' until that decision has been made. The emphasis for several years has been on the Facebook group.
Here’s a very extensive & HOPE-full video (50 minutes) “Summary of Research & Developments – 2016” from June 2016 presented by Dr. Dan Roberts, Director of MD Support (mdsupport.org)
Click here for the printed transcript
One of the best resources available is from the Prevent Blindness organization’s website called Guide Me. You answer a few questions and you will get a personalized guide with important aspects of AMD based on your answers:
Click here to go to Guide Me.
Click here to watch a 4-minute video that explains what AMD is, what causes it, and what can be done about it.
Click here for a good list of Frequently Asked Questions.
Click here to go to a great site maculardegeneration.net where you will find articles written by people with macular degeneration and caregivers. They also have a Facebook page.
Here are some of our favorites:
Click here to find out should I take the AREDS or AREDS2 supplements?
Click here for a video that covers important information about AMD
Click here for a description of dry vs. wet AMD (we are not recommending any products in this article, but be aware that the site may profit from some products they advertise.)
Click here for an explanation of the stages of AMD (we are not recommending any products in this article, but be aware that the site may profit from some products they advertise.)
Click here to read about what happens if you have AMD in only one eye
Click here for some answers to common questions about depression after diagnosis
Click here for an article about how vision rehabilitation helps prevent long-term depression
Click here for a very comprehensive page about wet AMD
Click here for a very comprehensive page about dry AMD
Click here for an article about how fast AMD progresses
Click here for 10 questions to ask your doctor
Click here to find a support group (I’ve been told that this site may not be up-to-date. Ask your eye specialist for a referral.)
Click here for eye-healthy foods including a Healthy Vision Grocery List (2/14/2022 site wasn’t formatting properly.) Click here to read the answer to the question ‘What should I be eating or not eating to hopefully slow the progression of my AMD?’
Click here to find out what vision changes/symptoms to look for (we are not recommending any products in this article, but be aware that the site may profit from some products they advertise.)
Click here to find out about the people who can help you (what are the differences between the types of eye doctors, do I need to see a specialist, etc)
Click here for tips on how to make the most of the vision you have (section toward the bottom of the page; lots of other good information on the whole page)
Click here for a FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) from the Macular Disease Foundation Australia.
Click here for a FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) from our Facebook group.
You can do searches on the Internet – there is a LOT of information there. We have done a lot of research and here’s how you can find it.
Click here to go to How to Navigate and Search Our Website.
Join our very active Facebook group Our Macular Degeneration Journey. There’s lots more information there as well as support whenever you need it.
Click here to go to How to Navigate and Search Our Website.
To find about more about me, about Sue, about our project, go to the menu at the top of the page.
Reviewed 02/14/2022
Many of you use Apple products such as an iPad and an iPhone. They both have some very good accessibility features built-in. Zoom is one of them. It allows you to magnify what’s on the screen.
Click here for detailed instructions to get you started.
Here’s a video that may help as well.
A great overview of the types of computer and non-computer devices available for those with low vision.
[For those of you who don’t know, the title is an homage to the Beatles 1966 song Taxman.]
Sue wrote this in 2016. She updated and added to the information in 2017 in her page It’s That Time – Tax Time Again!
Let me preface this with another disclaimer: I am not an accountant. I know next to nothing – that is zero, not a thing, nada – about taxes. I am writing this as a heads-up for people because, frankly, I had not given this a lot of thought and I bet some of you have not given it a lot of thought either.
Disclaimer: I am not an accountant and I know nothing about taxes. This is just a heads-up.
So, heads up! As my friend the accountant reminds me, it is tax season! That friend as well as the accountant who does our taxes both mentioned to me a little vein of silver in this gray cloud of visual impairment.
There are tax breaks for the visually impaired.
[The documents referenced below are for the tax year 2017).]
Click here for more information on the tax breaks for disabled taxpayers. This is an IRS document called Tax Highlights for Persons with Disabilities. [Lin/Linda: this document is for 2017 tax returns. The one for 2018 is not out yet.]
Before I get into what I have learned with limited research on the web, I would encourage you to get help from a professional or at least someone who hopes someday to be a professional. I googled ‘free tax preparation for the visually impaired’ and I found the IRS webpage Free Tax Return Preparation. With any luck, you should be able to find free tax help in your area. Within five miles I can get free help from accounting students at the local college. Within 25 miles there are seven places I can get free help with my taxes.
I would encourage you to get help from a professional, or at least someone who hopes someday to be a professional. The IRS has a webpage where you should be able to find free tax preparation in your area.
Reminder: I know nothing. Check it out for yourself on the websites I am expecting Lin will link to this post. Go to a professional. What I THINK I discovered in my browsing this morning is that taxpayers who are ‘blind’ are able to claim a higher standard deduction. This can be without itemizing.
Click here for the IRS list of their accessible forms & publications such as forms & how-to videos.
Those of us who are working can itemize and claim expenses that are directly linked to materials and services that are needed to keep us working in light of our visual impairment. I am talking about ‘toys’ (see previous post) as well as things like a driver or transportation service.
Click here for the IRS 2015 Publication for Medical and Dental Expenses for 2017. A quick search shows that you can deduct medical expenses for things such as guide dogs/ other service animals (buying, training & maintaining) and Braille books & magazines. Also, check out the section Impairment-Related Work Expenses. You may be able to deduct the cost of the ‘toys’ you use for work.
Those of us who are not visually impaired but have a visually impaired spouse or other dependents may also qualify for a tax break. For example, if your spouse is paying for someone to come in the afternoon and make your lunch because you are not able to do it yourself, that could be a deduction. You’ll find it in the documents we’ve referred you to under Child or Dependent Care Credit.
If you have a visually impaired child or spouse, you may qualify for a tax break called Child or Dependent Care Credit.
The budgeting.thenest.com website mentions, of course, basic medical expenses as being deductible. The site also mentions things like the difference in cost between standard print magazines and those same magazines in Braille. It does not say anything about large print magazines and books but I suspect a case could be made for those.
In short, heads up! Check it out. Get free help if you are unable to navigate it all yourself. There are some tax bennies for being visually impaired.
Written March 2016. Updated September 2018.
3/21/2016 A video & article about an app called Aipoly Vision which has been tested for object identification. That means the person points their iPhone or iPad at an object and they will hear the name of it if it’s in the database of 1,000 objects (they’re working to expand that to 5,000 objects). It uses the iPhone’s built-in accessibility functions.
Click here to learn more about this. It also talks about another app to read text such as restaurant menus.
The Aipoly Vision app is free from the App Store or iTunes.
Feb. 2016
Here’s a Press Release from Notal Vision, Inc., announcing that Medicare will pay for their ForseeHome telemonitoring system for patients who have dry AMD and who are at a high risk for it developing into wet AMD.
The ForseeHome system allows the patient to test their vision daily at home & the results are sent to their retina specialist for monitoring.
Click here to read more about the product.
Here’s a video showing how it works: ForseeHome AMD monitoring
FDA approved.
UK Implant of tiny telescopic lenses
US Implant of telescopic lens for those with advanced stage wet or dry AMD. Candidates have to qualify including no longer be candidates for medications.
CentraSight partners with BrightFocus for research and patient education. CentraSight provides & inserts the telescopic lenses.
If you don’t have a mobile device, you can check out these webpages & videos that show simulations of vision at various stages:
This webpage shows what people with AMD see as reported by people who have the disease.
This webpage shows in photo form what the various stages of MD vision loss are not only when looking at people but also looking at text. It would be handy to print this and have it with you to show others what you see.
If you have a mobile device, you can download and install apps that will simulate the vision after various stages of MD:
RNIB AMD (free; not available for Android) from the UK uses the camera in your device to simulate the various stages of MD (normal, early, medium, late). It also has these information pages: How Your Eye Works, About AMD, Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis, Treatment, Support.
VisionSim by the Braille Institute (free; not available for Android) Instead of settings for the various stages, there is a slider so you can move smoothly through the symptoms. Not available for Android. It also gives information about the various aspects of vision loss due to MD.
Android
Have not found any Android apps for this-yet.
You are here to follow the journey & misadventures of a woman named Sue who became visually impaired with Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD or ARMD) seemingly overnight. Join in the tears and laughter. Join in the discussion. Learn more about Age-Related Macular Degeneration. Find resources for your own journey or that of someone you know.
Sue is a psychologist trained in Dialectic Behavior Therapy (DBT) and is using it to help her cope with this vision loss. Her trusted and invaluable friends bring computer, research and occupational therapy skills to this endeavor. Yeah team! We hope you benefit from the fruits of our labors.
We are not offering free psychological therapy. We are not medical people. Please read the disclaimer.
This website is divided into 4 parts:
For those of you who aren’t familiar with websites or blogs like this, to ensure that you will be notified when information is added to the website, you must subscribe by email. On a laptop & most tablets, you’ll find the place where you can do this in the right-hand column. On a smart phone, you will find it below the content for the page that you are looking at.
We are still learning, we don’t know everything about this challenging disease.
Courses Coming Soon!
Thanks to Lesley B., Sally R., Dave M. and Gerry M. for going through the website looking for links that didn’t work, things that didn’t read well and typos. We couldn’t have done it without you.
Click here for the list of Frequently Asked Questions from our Facebook group.
There are several pages on the site that explain what AREDS2 means and who the AREDS2-based products are for. Click here to go to a list of articles.
Click here for the list.
There are a lot of links here. I’ve set up this page so that when you click on a link (words that are underlined & in blue or green), a NEW tab will open in your browser and this page STAYS WHERE IT IS. When you are done with the new page you opened, just close it. You do NOT need to use the back option. If you click on a link and the new page replaces this one, I’VE MADE A MISTAKE so please let me know by sending me an email at light2sight5153@gmail.com. Let me know exactly which link or links do not open a new tab or window.
Errors: If you click on a link and you get a ‘page not found’ error, please let me know by sending me an email at light2sight5153@gmail.com. Let me know exactly which link or links do not open a new tab or window.
Additions: If you have a link you’d like to add, please email at light2sight5153@gmail.com.
Click here to find ways to see simulations of what vision loss due to AMD is like at various stages.
listed in no particular order
listed in no particular order
I’ve not been able to verify if these are kept up to date. Let me know if you find that they are not or if you have one you’d like to add.
I don’t know if these are still accurate.
Formats: Braille, large print, e-book and audiobooks
Also called Stargardt’s Disease (SD) or Stargardt Macular Dystrophy (SMD) or Juvenile Macular Degeneration (JMD), it’s an inherited, juvenile macular degeneration. The progressive vision loss associated with Stargardt disease is caused by the death of photoreceptor cells in the central portion of the retina called the macula.
We will be regularly adding new information to the Highlights/News section as well as Sue’s Journal pages. To make sure you are notified when that happens, please go to ‘subscribe by email’. On laptops & most tablets, you will find out how to do that in the right-hand column. On a smart phone, it will be after the content.