Cause For Hope
Cause For Hope
Media Release From Retina New
Zealand
-------------------------------------
"Medical and scientific research has been making progress in
seeking blindness prevention, halting sight loss and may
even contribute to sight restoration", says the President of
Retina New Zealand, Anthony Haas.
"Basically, New Zealand's Retina International Toronto conferences delegation felt the scientific reports gave cause for more hope, sooner", he said, following his attendance at the July conference. Gene and protein research, pharmaceutical agents, therapies, stem cells, and surgical interventions such as transplants might reduce sight loss, and might help restore sight. "There are risks, and individuals may have increased opportunity to make personal choices as to whether they want to be part of the research and development, the information process, the peer support and public education", said Anthony Haas in a statement for World Retina Day, the last Saturday in September.
The United Kingdom's Dr
Alan Bird, Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, and a mentor to
New Zealand's ophthalmologist Dr Dianne Sharpe said, at the
conference conclusion, that the general view was that
"treatment is not far off" for some retinal conditions. He
said clinicians should prepare for this eventuality and that
patient co-operation through participation in data base
development and other ways was needed, and those clinicians
should prepare patients to play their role. Dr Jose Sahel,
Louis Pasteur University Paris,
also called for
clinician-patient co-operation to be expanded, and final
speakers also commended the value of the Retina
International conference where scientists, clinicians and
consumers conferred together.
Who are Retina New
Zealand Inc?
Retina NZ Inc. is a non-profit
organisation made up of people with eye conditions that
provides services to fellow members such that they can cope
with their condition and hope for the emergence of
treatments for permanent conditions causing sight-impairment
and blindness.
Retina NZ's specific aims are:
*
Raising public awareness about retinal degenerative
disorders
* Establishing links between families and
optometrists,
ophthalmologists, scientists, the Royal New
Zealand Foundation for the Blind, government
organisations, and social services
* Providing
members with information about their disorder, medical
research, visual and physical aids, entitlements of the
blind and partially sighted.
* Pressing for
Government-funded research and raising money to sponsor
research Peer support Retina New Zealand has a network of
Peer Supporters who could talk with people on the phone
about their personal experiences in living with their
retinal dystrophy and point to other sources of information.
Contact can be made through the Royal New Zealand
Foundation for the Blind on 0800 24 33 33 or Telefriend on
0800 100 051.
www.retina.org.nz
Our
blindness-friendly website aims to educate all groups
associated with our work and includes information about:
* Your Eye condition
* Medical and scientific
conference summaries
* List of related consumer
groups, research institutes and peer support, websites and
e-mail addresses.
Through Retina NZ's website and our print resources we are working to help ophthalmologists, optometrists, rehabilitation professionals, consumers, families, and carers to better inform those with retinal dystrophies about how to cope and what to hope for as scientists and their allies make the fruits of breakthroughs publicly accessible. We are pooling our human resources and linking to information and better communication channels so that we can build a more helpful community around Retina NZ.
Saturday 30th September is World Retina Day, where equivalent groups to Retina NZ worldwide celebrate, publicise, and educate the sighted public about advances in medical and scientific research leading to treatments for eye conditions causing severe sight impairments and blindness.
World Retina Day 2000
Retina NZ's
aim for World Retina Day 2000 is to publicise the exciting
discoveries about which the New Zealand delegation to the
Retina International conference learned. We wish to relate
the potential from the gene, stem cell, pharmaceutical,
therapeutic and other research to mainstream media be they
national or local, printed or electronic.
How can
retina nz help affected people and interested public ?
Retina New Zealand has a nationwide group of people with
retinal conditions willing to provide peer support over the
telephone and assistance in the dissemination of information
using our web-site and conference summaries in audio format.
If Retina New Zealand can be of assistance, please contact
us:
Auckland to Taupo:
Fraser
Alexander
Ph: (09) 355 6914
E-mail: falexander@rnzfb.org.nz
Taupo to
Wellington:
Pat Nicolson
Phone:
(04) 233 8140
E-mail:
max.nicholson@xtra.co.nz
Nelson/Canterbury/West Coast
:
Kay Newton
Ph: (03) 3795 807
E-mail : kaye.newton@ph.co.nz
Otago/Southland
Helen Adams
Ph:
(03) 467 2278
E-mail: adams@es.co.nz
National president
Anthony Haas:
Ph: (04) 385 0237
E-mail:
ahaas@decisionmaker.co.nz
Fraser Alexander
Public
Education Co-ordinator
Retina New Zealand
Inc.