 |
Humaria, 9, was poked in the
eye with a needle, shattering
her lens. At CEITC, an ORBIS
partner, a doctor removed the
damaged lens and implant-
ed an artificial one, restoring
her sight. |
Bangladesh is one of the world’s poorest countries, with half its population living below the poverty line. Lack of public health care resources, poor nutrition and disease contribute to high rates of blindness. Nearly 800,000 blind people live in
Bangladesh, 40,000 of them being children under the age of 15.
The ORBIS Flying Eye Hospital visited Bangladesh for the first time in 1985. ORBIS opened an office in
Bangladesh in 1999.
Priority areas
ORBIS’s work in
Bangladesh focuses on:
- Children’s eye care services
- Cataract and refractive error, such as nearsightedness
- Corneal blindness and eye banking
- Diabetic retinopathy
- Human resource development
- Advocating for national blindness prevention strategies
In 2008, ORBIS made considerable progress in Bangladesh in urban primary eye care, eye banking and human resource development. Through 18 ORBIS projects:
- More than 3,500 doctors and other eye care staff received training
- Over 380,000 people received eye examinations
- More than 300,000 children and adults received non-surgical ophthalmic medical treatment or eyeglasses
- Over 16,500 eye surgeries were performed
To date, ORBIS has:
- Successfully launched several pediatric ophthalmology centers in
Bangladesh
- Supported the establishment of the country’s first autonomous eye bank
- Targeted efforts in some of the most isolated and underserved areas
ORBIS "firsts" in Bangladesh
ORBIS has achieved numerous “firsts” regarding eye care in
Bangladesh:
 |
|
Cornea transplant recipient Monica Islam can
now see well enough to cook and take a job. |
- An
ORBIS
Flying
Eye
Hospital training program introduced ocular microsurgery to
Bangladesh.
- ORBIS equipped the country’s first public pediatric eye care center.
- ORBIS established
Bangladesh's first rural vision centers, introducing pediatric ophthalmology services to villagers in remote communities.
- ORBIS helped build the capacity of Sandhani Eye Bank --- now Bangladesh's most active, successful eye bank.
- ORBIS initiated
Bangladesh's first training programs for optometrists and opticians.
- In March 2007, ORBIS organized the first International Symposium and Workshop on Clinical Engineering in
Bangladesh. This meeting resulted in the establishment of the nation’s first Biomedical and Clinical Engineering Society.
- ORBIS introduced Cyber-Sight, ORBIS’s telemedicine initiative, to provide worldwide, Internet-based ophthalmic patient consultation for free to any qualified partner in
Bangladesh.
- Bangladeshi doctors received training on virtual reality surgery simulators for the first time during
ORBIS
Flying
Eye
Hospital programs.
- Through ORBIS, Bangladeshi ophthalmologists can now receive continuing medical education credit through the
American
Academy of Ophthalmology for online work completed by Cyber-Sight partners and for virtual reality surgeries conducted on surgical simulators.
ORBIS partners
The ORBIS Bangladesh office has in the past overseen projects in Rawalpindi and Karachi,
Pakistan, and Moulvibazar, Bangladesh.
Our current partners, all located in Bangladesh,
include:
Chittagong Eye Infirmary and Training Complex • Diabetic Association of Bangladesh • Dip Eye Care Foundation • Dipsikha Anirban • Dip Jele Jai
Eye
Hospital • DREAM Bangladesh •
Islamia
Eye
Hospital • Jhenaidah District Government Hospital • Joypurhat Sadar Hospital •
Khanjanpur
Mission
Hospital • Lalmonirhat District Government Hospital •
Manikganj
Sadar
Hospital • Momtaz Eye Hospital •
Mymensingh
BNSB
Eye
Hospital • Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development and Cooperatives (MOLGRD&C), Government of Bangladesh • RDRS Lalmonirhat
*Blindness is defined as visual acuity of less than 3/60 or a corresponding visual field loss to less than 10 degrees in the better eye with best possible correction.
** Low vision is defined as visual acuity of less than 6/18 but equal to or better than 3/60, or a corresponding visual field loss to less than 20 degrees in the better eye with best possible correction.
