Report Shows Pros and Cons of Eye Surgery for Farsightedness
Friday, September 15th, 2006A report by the Harvard Medical School in Boston provides the pros and cons of the surgical option for presbyopia, a common form of farsightedness.
A report by the Harvard Medical School in Boston provides the pros and cons of the surgical option for presbyopia, a common form of farsightedness.
Cuba will bring its free eye surgery program to Africa and Asia in the coming months, expanding a campaign that has restored eyesight to hundreds of thousands of poor people in 28 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Approximately 14 million Americans over the age of 12 suffer from visual impairment, according to the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). The most common forms are the refractive disorders myopia and hyperopia.
A non-governmental organisation (NGO), ORBIS Eye Flying International, has donated eye equipment worth 10 million dollars to the Kwara State government.
Thanks to science, people with damaged corneas will no longer have to wait for donors, as it has now become possible to create artificial corneas using biomimetic materials.
Singhvi Charitable Trust conducted a free eye camp from September 4 to 8 at Singhvi Diagnostic Centre on Triplicane High Road (Tamil Nadu, India). More than 150 persons were screened. Spectacles were distributed to more than 100 persons and 16 referred for eye surgery.