DONATE EYES: GIFT SIGHT. SOME FACTS TO KNOW


 

World Sight Day: October 12

World Sight Day is an annual event that focuses attention on the global problem of blindness and visual impairment. It aims to raise public awareness around the world about blindness and visual impairment, and to garner support and commitment in ensuring the right to sight for all.

The theme of this year's event, low vision and refractive error, draws attention to the hundreds of millions of people who are functionally blind simply because they need spectacles. Refractive error can be simply diagnosed, measured and corrected; yet many people in low and middle income countries do not have access to these basic services.

Main causes of visual impairment

Some of these diseases, such as trachoma and river blindness, are prevalent primarily in less developed areas of the world where there are also specific environmental hazards.

In many middle income and industrialized countries, three other eye conditions have emerged as potential threats to the status of sight of their populations. The increase of diabetes among many population groups has caused diabetic retinopathy to be added to the priority list, while glaucoma, an eye disease known for centuries, remains on the public health agenda due to difficulties in its early diagnosis and frequent necessity of life long treatment. Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) ranks third among the global causes of visual impairment with a blindness prevalence of 8,7%. It is the primary cause of visual deficiency in industrialized countries. An emerging important cause of visual impairment is uncorrected refractive errors

 

  1. Cataract
  2. Trachoma
  3. Onchocerciasis (river blindness)
  4. Childhood blindness
  5. Refractive errors and low vision
  6. Diabetic retinopathy
  7. Glaucoma
  8. Age related macular degeneration
  9. Corneal opacities
  10. Genetic eye diseases

Magnitude of blindness and visual impairment

Since the estimates of the 1990s, new data based on the 2002 global population show a reduction in the number of people who are blind or visually impaired, and those who are blind from the effects of infectious diseases, but an increase in the number of people who are blind from conditions related to longer life spans. This new information underscores the need to modify the health care agenda to include the management of the diseases that are now becoming prevalent.

Magnitude of visual impairment

Globally, in 2002 more than 161 million people were visually impaired, of whom 124 million people had low vision and 37 million were blind. However, refractive error as a cause of visual impairment was not included, which implies that the actual global magnitude of visual impairment is greater.

Worldwide for each blind person, an average of 3.4 people have low vision, with country and regional variation ranging from 2.4 to 5.5.

These figures - the first global estimates since the early 1990s - are the best achievable scientific estimates of the global burden of visual impairment and are the result of new studies carried out in nearly all WHO regions, which have substantially updated the epidemiological data.

Distribution of visual impairment

By age: Visual impairment is unequally distributed across age groups. More than 82% of all people who are blind are 50 years of age and older, although they represent only 19% of the world's population. Due to the expected number of years lived in blindness (blind years), childhood blindness remains a significant problem, with an estimated 1.4 million blind children below age 15.

By gender: Available studies consistently indicate that in every region of the world, and at all ages, females have a significantly higher risk of being visually impaired than males.

Geographically: Visual impairment is not distributed uniformly throughout the world. More than 90% of the world's visually impaired live in developing countries.

Note: These articles on eyesight have been adopted from the WHO (World Health Organization ) website. For more details, log on to

http://www.who.int/blindness/causes/priority/en/index.html