Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India must scale up its war on blindness

Create a comprehens­ive costeffect­ive model that provides screening, diagnosis and treatment detection

- SY Quraishi, former Chief Election Commission­er of India, is the honorary chairman, Sightsaver­s (India) The views expressed are personal Inner Voice comprises contributi­ons from our readers. The views expressed are personal Innervoice@hindustant­imes.com

India is home to one-fourth of the world’s blind population with eight million blind people in the country. Over six million of them should not have been blind, as 75% of blindness is easily preventabl­e. On World Sight Day today, let’s see how we can prevent most of blindness in the country.

Anshu, 14, Muskan, 12, and Shrasti, 6, attend school in Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh. The children, instead of playing with their classmates, sit idly not engaging with children their age. It is the mandate of the playgroup coterie for they believe they, too, will go blind if they talk to blind children. The three sisters have cataract, the largest cause of preventabl­e blindness in India.

Vision loss from avoidable causes like cataract (63%), refractive errors (10%) and glaucoma (5%) can be treated or prevented with cost-effective means. The first task is awareness. The next is to have a robust system to provide accessible quality eye care facilities across the country, so that no one is blind due to avoidable causes.

The National Programme for Control of Blindness (NPCB), a centrally sponsored scheme, was launched in 1976 to bring down the prevalence of preventabl­e blindness to 0.3% by 2020.

Surveys over the years have shown considerab­le reduction in the rate of preventabl­e blindness, yet there is a lot that needs to be done. The current survey — 2015-18 — is in progress with results awaited any time.

The backlog for cataract surgeries continues to remain a big challenge and is primarily because of the non-availabili­ty of human resources. Our country has an create one’s own ‘turning point’ by going the whole hog and with determinat­ion and willpower. As American singer Jimmy Dean says, “I can’t change the direction of the wind, but I can adjust my sails to reach my goal.”

In other words, life gives us plenty of chances for a turning point, and some of us make the best use of them but many of us miss them. We miss such chances merely because we tend to be carefree and careless. Therefore, we must understand that life is all about great chances and turning points. acute shortage of doctors for correcting eye ailments. As per Vision 2020 of The Right to Sight initiative, there are about 12,000 ophthalmol­ogists in India for its 1.3 billion population, resulting in a ratio of one ophthalmol­ogist for every one lakh people. In rural India, this ratio is even worse: one ophthalmol­ogist for every 250,000. There ratio of availabili­ty of qualified optometris­ts, approximat­ely one for every 25,000 people, is also skewed.

The scaling up of a comprehens­ive costeffect­ive eye care model that provides quality screening, diagnosis and treatment detection, especially through a health system strengthen­ing approach is required. A humongous advocacy effort to educate the ageing population, which is most affected by cataract, and a workforce of mid level health workers to provide basic eye care services can enable us to take eye care everywhere.

Those who are blind should certainly have adequate means to realise their full potential and lead a life of dignity. The loss of sight owing to avoidable reasons affects people in more ways than one. First, blindness has an important cause and effect relationsh­ip with poverty. Educationa­l, social, and economic deprivatio­n becomes an integral part of their lives, especially those living in marginalis­ed urban and rural pockets of our country. Their burden grows multifold when gripped with visual impairment.

The National Programme for Control of Blindness envisions “eye health for all”, which is the mainstay of this year’s World Sight Day theme: “eye care everywhere”. The national body seeks to enhance community awareness on eye care, strengthen infrastruc­ture facilities, and lay an emphasis on preventive measures for eye care. In doing so, it is not alone. Several non-government organisati­ons are key in combating avoidable blindness.

The three Vidisha girls (mentioned earlier in the article) were screened for cataract in their school under Sightsaver­s India’s School Eye Health Programme. What followed was a visit by a community health worker to meet their parents who are illiterate and have no clue that their children’s blindness is irreversib­le.

It is through counsellin­g and assurance that they send their children for sight saving surgery 60 kilometers away to Bhopal. The children are able to see the world clearly, not being a part of the 8 million or more blind population of India. The hope of a bright future awaits them.

THE NATIONAL PROGRAMME FOR CONTROL OF BLINDNESS WAS LAUNCHED IN 1976 TO BRING DOWN THE PREVALENCE OF PREVENTABL­E BLINDNESS TO 0.3% BY 2020. SURVEYS HAVE SHOWN CONSIDERAB­LE REDUCTION IN THE RATE OF PREVENTABL­E BLINDNESS

We need to be ready to grab them and go ahead towards a better and happier tomorrow.

Also, let us remind ourselves that if we miss the first bus, we have to be determined not to let it happen again when the second bus comes our way. After all, just as day follows night, good days, too, come after bad ones.

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