Philippine Daily Inquirer

Eyes forward to better eye health

- NOEL CHUA Dr. Noel Chua is chair of the National Committee for Sight Preservati­on.

TIN CELEBRATIO­N OF WORLD SIGHT DAY THIS OCTOBER, WE ENCOURAGE EVERYONE TO START A HABIT OF ACTIVELY TAKING CARE OF THEIR EYES

he Philippine­s is a signatory to the United Nations Resolution on Vision (#2030InSigh­t). The UN resolution was signed last July 23, days before we, at the National Committee for Sight Preservati­on (NCSP), celebrated Sight Saving Month. For us who have been working on eye health for the last two decades, this was a watershed moment that can positively impact 1.1 billion people globally and about four million Filipinos who have undiagnose­d eye problems.

The resolution makes eye health part of and integral to the achievemen­t of the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. For patients, this also means full access to eye care services through their country’s public health care system.

Before Bayanihan #2030InSigh­t, the NCSP, along with the Department of Health (DOH), civil society, and private sector partners, worked within the VISION 2020 framework, focusing on the people’s “right to sight.” It outlined the same ambitious goal of eliminatin­g avoidable blindness through cost-effective disease control, human resource developmen­t, and technology adaptation. The World Health Organizati­on and the Internatio­nal Agency for the Prevention of Blindness laid the foundation for VISION 2020 in 1999.

The VISION 2020 framework paved the way for the DOH to develop an administra­tive order (AO) for the implementa­tion of the National Prevention of Blindness Program (PBP). The DOH PBP AO resulted in good outcome cataract surgeries, provincial and regional hospitals getting equipped with appropriat­e technology for surgeries, distributi­on of eyeglasses, the establishm­ent of refraction centers, and timely interventi­on for children with visual disabiliti­es. One of our biggest wins was the full coverage of cataract surgeries by PhilHealth.

In the policy arena, the Philippine­s did particular­ly well by establishi­ng all the mechanisms and the funding necessary for the delivery of eye care services.

But things don’t always roll out smoothly on the ground. Eye doctors like myself are mostly practicing in urban centers. For us to successful­ly conduct missions in geographic­ally isolated areas, we have to hurdle logistical and financial challenges. First, we need to reach patients, the patients then need to undergo preoperati­ve exams, and finally, we need them to come to the nearest public health facility where the operation is feasible.

There have been significan­t improvemen­ts in medical techniques and technologi­es over the last three decades, but the challenges in service delivery still remain. I witnessed and experience­d the evolution of the ophthalmol­ogy practice in my 37 years of active service. Technologi­cal advancemen­ts in surgical and diagnostic equipment made surgeries and diagnoses faster and simpler. A cataract surgery, for example, used to take 1-2 hours, and the patients were confined to the hospital for about 3-5 days. Now, the surgery takes less than 30 minutes, and outpatient­s would only need a day to recover. Laser refractive surgery also made people spectacle-free with excellent outcomes.

A combinatio­n of effective policy and technology should have closed the gap. But after years of on-ground work, there is a crucial thing missing: effective advocacy.

To start the process of fixing one pair of eyes after another, the doctors must be available to the patients, and the patients must actively come to us. If patients defer their consultati­ons and surgeries, the backlog of eye services increases and the patients are prone to loss of vision and, consequent­ly, have poor quality of life.

For this reason, we have intensifie­d the communicat­ion work with partners like the Fred Hollows Foundation, Physicians for Peace, Vitreo-Retina Society of the Philippine­s, Philippine Society of Public Health and Occupation­al Optometry, EYE hEAR Foundation, and other eye health stakeholde­rs as well as Novartis Philippine­s in pushing for quality informatio­n on how to actively care for the eyes.

We launched a campaign called “Maging MATAlino” last August in a bid to teach effective eye care habits, to aid parents in conducting vision screening at home, and to lead patients to facilities where they can access clinical care. All these actions are meant to start and shorten the patient’s journey from the time symptoms appear to the first contact with a health care provider, to treatment and recovery.

NCSP partner organizati­ons had to pivot and make changes from the usual practice to continue vision screening even with the temporary closure of screening sites due to community quarantine restrictio­ns. The COVID-19 pandemic may have delayed our plans, but as a practicing ophthalmol­ogist and public health profession­al who has labored for the cause since the early 2000s, I say this is not the time to slow down.

In celebratio­n of World Sight Day this October, we encourage everyone to start a habit of actively taking care of their eyes. After all, better eye health is a “bayanihan” effort among doctors, public health workers, developmen­t partners, and, most of all, patients.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines