Purpose: This study aimed to quantify the severity of fear of falling (FOF) in people with low vision (LV) compared with age–gender-matched healthy individuals during gait initiation (GI). Methods: A total of 14 adults with LV and 14 age–gender-matched healthy adults were recruited from local communities. The Falls Efficacy Scale International was used to evaluate FOF. We compared temporal events between healthy and LV groups. For the healthy group, GI under normal vision was further compared to conditions using a low-vision sight simulator (SS) and an immersive virtual reality (VR) environment designed to simulate a fear-evoking experience. Independent t-test and one-way repeated measure ANOVA were conducted for statistical analysis (p 0.05). Conclusions: This study demonstrates that individuals with LV adopt a chronically conservative motor program during the transition from standing to walking. These postural hesitations are statistically comparable to those observed under fear-evoking, VR-induced environments. These findings suggest that LV is associated with a distinct biomechanical strategy that prioritizes static stability over dynamic movement. Accordingly, multidisciplinary rehabilitation approaches that emphasize sensory reweighting, including vestibular training, alongside interventions targeting FOF, may be essential for mitigating altered postural control and reducing fall risk in the LV population.
Ko et al. (Thu,) studied this question.