Abstract
We assessed worries of 162 German adolescents with visual impairment. Most adolescents reported low levels of worry. Nonetheless, about 25% showed moderate to high levels of worry related to a further decline of vision and not finding the right romantic partner. While adolescents with visual impairment reported lower levels of worry than an age- and gender-matched sample of sighted adolescents, adolescents with stronger visual impairment worried more than those with lower levels of visual impairment. In addition, higher levels of worry were associated with more depressive symptoms and, in part, with less optimism, negative changes of vision in recent years, higher age, and worse grades at school. Possible reasons for the inconsistent associations of visual impairment with levels of worry are discussed.
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