Times Colonist

Nepal’s God of Sight eye doctor to expand work beyond border

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— Just next to the Mayadevi temple where Buddha was born more than 2,600 years ago, hundreds of people lined up outside a makeshift hospital on a recent hazy day, hoping their fading eyesight could be restored.

A day later, these saffronrob­ed Buddhist monks, old farmers and housewives were able to see the world again because the nation’s renowned eye surgeon Dr. Sanduk Ruit was there with his innovative and inexpensiv­e cataract surgery that has earned him many awards.

At the visitor centre turned into temporary eye hospital in Lumbini, 288 kilometres southwest of Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu, the assembly-line surgery made it possible for the nearly 400 patients to get Ruit’s surgery in just three days.

“The whole objective, aim and my passion and love is to see there remain no people with unnecessar­y blindness in this part of the world,” said Ruit, also known as Nepal’s God of Sight.

“It is important that the people do receive equitable service and not that haves receive and have nots don’t receive it. I want to make sure that everybody receives it.”

Many people in Nepal, most of them poor, have benefited from the work of Ruit, who founded the Tilganga Institute of Ophthalmol­ogy in Kathmandu and regularly visits remote villages high in the mountains and low lands of the Himalayan nation, taking with him a team of experts and equipment to bring surgery to their villages.

Ruit has already performed 130,000 cataract surgeries and is now aiming to expand his work, taking it to as many countries as possible through a foundation he formed with British philanthro­pist Tej Kohli, which targets 500,000 surgeries in the next five years.

Ruit said the idea of the Tej Kohli Ruit Foundation is to make cataract surgeries in Nepal affordable and accessible to all.

“We will scale it up globally to other parts of the world where it is needed,” he said.

Ruit began his work in 1984 when the surgery was done by removing the entire cloudy cataract and giving thick glasses. He found that most people would not wear the glasses and chances of complicati­on were very high.

So he pioneered a simple technique where he removes the cataract without stitches through small incisions and replaces them with a low-cost artificial lens.

Ruit’s average surgery costs about $100.

The surgery is free for those who can’t afford it. Patients rarely have to spend the night at the hospital.

Nepal has limited number of hospitals and health workers and services are out of reach for most people.

Cataracts, which form a white film that cloud the eye’s natural lens, commonly occur in older people but also sometimes affect children or young adults. The condition first causes vision to blur or become foggy because the eye is unable to focus properly.

As the cataract grows and matures, it can eventually block out all light. Exposure to harsh ultraviole­t radiation, especially at high altitudes as in Nepal, is a major risk factor.

At the surgery camps in Lumbini, patients and family were all praise for the doctor.

Bhola Chai, a 58-year-old office worker who had to retire because of his fading vision, was thrilled he could finally see again.

“This surgery has changed my life,” Chai said.

Others who have already benefited from Ruit’s cataract surgery likened the eye doctor to a god.

“The doctor is just not godsent but he is a god for me who has given me a new life,” said Satindra Nath Tripathi, a farmer who benefited from the surgery. “My world was completely dark, but now I have new life and new sight.”

With his fading eyesight restored, Tripathi is already looking forward to working on his farm, growing rice, wheat and vegetables.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eye surgeon Dr. Sanduk Ruit of Nepal is renowned for his innovative and inexpensiv­e cataract surgery for the poor. He is taking his work beyond the Himalayan mountains to other parts of the world.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eye surgeon Dr. Sanduk Ruit of Nepal is renowned for his innovative and inexpensiv­e cataract surgery for the poor. He is taking his work beyond the Himalayan mountains to other parts of the world.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An elderly Nepalese patient waits for his eye patch to be removed at the Tilganga Eye Center in Kathmandu, Nepal.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An elderly Nepalese patient waits for his eye patch to be removed at the Tilganga Eye Center in Kathmandu, Nepal.

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