The New Zealand Herald

A day at the clinic

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Port Vila Central Hospital, Vanuatu: On a steamy October morning a long corridor is lined with anxious people wearing colourful clothing.

They wait their turn to pass through a door to which a piece of paper bearing the words “Eye Clinic” is taped.

Most are here because of the work of the seven eye nurses who cover this nation of 65 inhabited islands. Some patients have travelled for two days.

It is “outreach week”. It happens once or twice a year and is a bit like speed dating.

Specialist­s from overseas fly in and do as much good as they can with the available tools.

Two ophthalmol­ogists from Fiji are here. They work in a small room crammed with support staff. On one wall is a standard eye chart which has on its flipside a range of symbols for the illiterate. There are machines for examining eyes and one that can be used for straightfo­rward laser surgery.

Conditions are far from ideal but by the end of the week the doctors will have done laser surgeries, extracted foreign bodies, treated corneal ulcers, drained an abscess and examined the eyes of 183 people — most of them diabetic.

Cataracts are still a major cause of avoidable blindness but diabetic retinopath­y — where high blood sugar damages tissue at the back of the eye — is close behind and growing rapidly in the Pacific which is home to seven of the 10 countries with the highest rate of the disease.

Nearly a quarter of Vanuatu’s population of 280,000 have diabetes, according to the World Health Organisati­on.

Consequent­ly there is a huge number of people who need their eyes checked, people who may not know they have the disease, people who will go blind without treatment.

The good news for them is the country is about to get a modern eye clinic.

In February, a $2.1 million refurbishe­d and extended eye clinic, funded by Fred Hollows Foundation NZ, is due to open. It will have modern laser equipment and the foundation is funding raising to buy an up-to-date diagnostic camera.

It will be headed by the country’s first resident eye doctor. His name is Dr Johnson Kasso, one of the ophthalmol­ogists in the midst of the hubbub in that basic hospital room during outreach week.

Kasso decided to move from general medicine to eye health to build on work by the foundation.

Yes, he says, he could have got better money working in a wealthier country. “But I thought if I go somewhere and people ask whether you have enough ophthalmol­ogists in Vanuatu and you tell them that there are no ophthalmol­ogists. In a way it is quite an embarrassi­ng thing.

“So I am thinking more about the people than the money, about the diabetes load that we have.”

Kasso says a third of the estimated 46,000 people with diabetes in Vanuatu are at risk of going blind without treatment. “The disease threatens the retina, that’s why we call it sight-threatenin­g diabetic retinopath­y.”

Treatment is by laser surgery or a series of injections. “Unfortunat­ely we don’t have the capability for injections but hopefully as soon as the new clinic is open we will have all the equipment so we can deliver laser.”

 ?? Photo / Chris Tarpey ?? Dr Johnson Kasso says a third of the estimated 46,000 people with diabetes in Vanuatu are at risk of going blind without treatment.
Photo / Chris Tarpey Dr Johnson Kasso says a third of the estimated 46,000 people with diabetes in Vanuatu are at risk of going blind without treatment.

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