The New Zealand Herald

Eyes open, but too late?

This Christmas, the Herald and The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ are working to bring the Gift of Sight to the Pacific, where four out of five people who are blind don’t need to be. An increasing number of these are young people, suffering from diabetes-rela

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Pastor Lesley Bong’s final sermon may be too late for him but not, he hopes, for his kids. At 67, he has come to be defined by his religion and his disease.

Careful what you eat, he preaches. “I have served within the Presbyteri­an Church of Vanuatu in many parishes for 22 years now,” says Pastor Bong, who became a preacher in 1996, the same year he was diagnosed with diabetes.

He has Type 2 diabetes, the more common type, where the body does not make or use insulin well. Without enough insulin, glucose stays in the blood and over time can cause problems with kidneys, nerves, feet and eyes and increase the risk of heart disease.

“Now I have got two kidney problems,” says Bong. “The diabetes has created many different problems.”

The Herald met the pastor in October at the main hospital in Port Vila, Vanuatu, where he was admitted 10 days earlier with “frightenin­g” breathing difficulti­es.

His eyes are shot.

“This one is open but I cannot see anything,” he says, pointing to his left eye.

An ophthalmol­ogist visiting with a Fred Hollows Foundation “outreach” found advanced diabetic retinopath­y — damage to blood vessels of the retina — in both eyes.

The disease has also caused glaucoma in one. Treatment is difficult, prospects for that eye are bleak.

His better eye needs laser surgery but the old machine at the hospital is not up to this particular task.

Though the procedure cannot restore lost sight, it is needed to guard against further damage.

There is no choice but to wait until a new eye clinic with a modern laser machine opens early next year.

The wait comes with risk of further loss of sight.

Ophthalmol­ogist Johnson Kasso,

who will head the new clinic, could see through the microscope weak vessels that could bleed at any time.

“If there is a further bleed it will be very hard to salvage his vision,” says Kasso.

Vanuatu has relied on the loan of an old laser machine which can do only simple operations.

“That has made treating diabetic retinopath­y patients very difficult,” says Dr Kasso.

“The new clinic will make a really big difference.”

Pausing regularly to regather his breath, the pastor tells his story of declining health. His message: beware what you eat.

It may be too late for him but not, he hopes, for his family.

“I have five kids, I have 13 grandchild­ren. I always remind them they have to be careful what they have eaten every day because the lifestyle changes brings us problems.”

Those lifestyle changes include the drift to bigger towns such as Port Vila, with less space to grow vegetables and the easy availabili­ty of cheap Western foods. Soft drinks, but also white rice — a carbohydra­te that quickly metabolise­s to sugar — which has become a staple in the islands.

“I always encourage them, tell them that they have to eat something that will build up their body, that will not destroy their body.”

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