Daily Nation Newspaper

THE EYE DOCTOR WHO COULD NOT SEE STARS

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FOR many years, Dr Andrew Bastawrous could not see clearly enough to spot the leaves on trees or the stars in the sky.

Teachers kept telling him he was lazy and he kept missing the football during games. Then, aged 12, his mother took him to have his eyes tested and that changed everything. Now he is a prize-winning eye doctor with a plan to use a smartphone app to bring better vision to millions of children around the world. Dr Bastawrous told the BBC: "I'll never forget that moment at the optometris­t. I had trial lenses on and looked across the car park and saw the gravel on the road had so much detail I had had no idea about. "A couple of weeks later I got my first pair of glasses and that s when I saw stars for the first time, started doing well at school and it completely transforme­d my life." Around the world 12 million children, like Dr Bastawrous, have sight problems that could be corrected by a pair of glasses. But in many areas, access to eye specialist­s is difficult - leaving children with visual impairment­s that can harm school work and, ultimately, their opportunit­ies in later life.

POCKET EYE TESTS

In rural Kenya, for example, there is one eye doctor for one million people. Meanwhile in the US, there is on average one ophthalmol­ogist for every 15, 800 people. In 2011 Dr Bastawrous - by now an eye doctor in England decided to study the eye health of the population of Kitale, Kenya, as part of his PhD. He took about £100, 000 of eye equipment in an attempt to set up 100 temporary eye clinics but found this didn't work, as reliable roads and electricit­y were scarce. It was realising that these same areas had great mobile phone coverage - with about 80 percent of the population owning a cell phone - that sparked the idea for Peek. Peek is a smartphone­based system that can bring eye care to people wherever they are. One part of the Peek system works in a similar way to an optician’s eye chart, checking how well a person can see.

‘TEACHERS AS OPTICIANS’

Dr Bastawrous wanted to see if Peek could be used by nonspecial­ists in areas where eye specialist­s are scarce. His team came up with the idea of training teachers - turning the teacher into an optician. Now a trial published in the Lancet Global Health shows Peek can be used successful­ly to bring pocket eye tests to schools, helping more children to get the glasses they need.

HOW IT WORKS:

&hildren are shown a series of “E” shapes in different orientatio­ns and sizes. The child points in the direction the symbol is facing The teacher (who cannot see the screen) then swipes the phone in the same direction The app determines how good the child’s eyesight is

‘TRIED AND TESTED’

Dr Bastawrous - together with a team of researcher­s from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine - spent a week training 25 teachers in 50 schools in rural Kenya to use their Peek system or standard eye tests normally done by specialist nurses. Half of the primary school children were then tested using the Peek system and half with standard eye tests using a series of paper testing cards. After their tests, children who were examined by the Peek system were shown a splitscree­n simulation of how blurred their sight was compared with someone who could see clearly. Crucially, they were then given a printout of this to pass on to their parents, showing them just how poor their child’s sight was.

The Peek system also sent out details of the nearest eye clinic along with text-message reminders to encourage parents to take their children to hospital. Meanwhile, the children who took the paper-based vision test had their scores recorded manually and, if the teachers detected any eye problems, were given a paper letter to pass on to their parents. Researcher­s found twice as many children attended hospital for free eye checks with Peek than went for standard eye tests.

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