Prevention of Blindness
Prevention of Blindness
By
Dr Arvind Kumar
1st
April inaugurates the commencement of the prevention of blindness week to be
observed from 1 to 7 April by the National Society for the Prevention of
Blindness-India (NSPB-I) and its State and district branches. According to
broad estimates, India had 7 million blind people. As per criteria to assess
blindness adopted by the Government of India, nearly 15 million were blind
according to the 2001 Census. Of them, 2.70 lakh were children aged less than
16. Over 50 per cent of blindness could be prevented in children. In many
cases, impairment of vision was preventable or curable. There is lack of
knowledge about proper nutrition and hygiene.
An
estimated 456 million people of India's total population require vision
correction (spectacles, contact lenses or refractive surgery) to be able to see
and function for learning, work and life in general. Twenty six million people
are blind or vision impaired due to eye disease. A further 133 million people,
including 11 million children, are blind or vision impaired due to simply from
lack of an eye examination and an appropriate pair of glasses (uncorrected
refractive error).
A
Delhi Declaration was endorsed by all stake holders of optometry in January
2010 which stated that "optometrist commit to providing excellent vision
care to all those who seek the service of an optometrist". This
declaration was made possible through the support of International center of
Eye care education (ICEE) and the meeting was sponsored by the Australia India
Council (AIC). This declaration is historical and highlights the commitment of
optometrist towards eradication of avoidable blindness.
The
theme for the week is “Systematic
Diseases Affecting the Eyes”.
#DelhiDeclaration #ICEE #AIC #Blindness #Australia #January #
#DelhiDeclaration #ICEE #AIC #Blindness #Australia #January #
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