Country’s First Mobile Optometry Clinic Launched
Vision Bus Aotearoa is being launched on 10 June at the University of Auckland at a ceremony attended by the Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro.
Aotearoa’s first custom-built mobile optometry service - Vision Bus Aotearoa - is being launched on 10 June at the University of Auckland at a ceremony attended by the Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro.
The
vehicle is a state-of-the-art comprehensive optometry clinic
that allows University of Auckland staff and student
optometrists to deliver full eye exams onsite at schools and
other locations.
It recently started visiting
south Auckland schools, marae and refugee centres offering
eye tests and treatments, including glasses, at no cost to
patients.
Professor Steven Dakin at the School of
Optometry and Vision Science has championed the idea over
the past five years only seeing it come to fruition this
year.
“Our own University-run school vision
screening programme across greater Auckland, reveals that
one in ten schoolchildren need glasses but don’t have
them.
“This is concerning because they don’t
have good visual correction which means they can’t see
whiteboards, which impacts educationally,” Dakin
says.
“More worryingly, we see potentially blinding
conditions, such as keratoconus, regularly going undiagnosed
in children, with Māori and Pacific children
disproportionately affected,” he says.
Cost is a
significant barrier to accessing eye-health care in New
Zealand.
“For adults, the model in Aotearoa is that the
customer pays but, in Australia appointments are
subsidised,” Dakin says.
In Australia, a national eye
health survey has found the most common causes of visual
impairment are uncorrected refractive errors (63%), where
people don’t get the glasses they need, or cataracts,
where people don’t get the surgery they
need.
“We don’t have the same data in
Aotearoa, but the situation is likely to be serious here,”
Dakin says.
The School of Optometry and Vision Science
plans to lead a national survey for Aotearoa New
Zealand.
Vision Bus Aotearoa is driven by a Kiwi who
trained at Auckland University and has previously worked as
a flying optometrist in the Australian
outback.
“Everything a modern optometry clinic
has, we have, on board. It’s really a New Zealand
first,” Veeran Morar says.
Veeran is inspired by his
own experience as a child. He loved playing hockey, but one
day he noticed he couldn’t see the hockey ball well. His
mother took him to an optometrist.
“I put on my first
pair of glasses and I was really blown back. I could see
leaves on the trees again. I realised what I had been
missing out on.
“I knew at the time it was going
to change my life and it did. I went on to play hockey for
New Zealand.
“I am reminded of that experience every
time I give a kid a pair of glasses.”
Optometry
students travel on the Vision Bus with Morar, as part of
their training.
“I think our bus is vital for
education, not only for our optometry students but for
school kids in the community who are being touched by
optometry,” Veeran says.
“That should lead to
more kids coming to study with us. We are keen to have more
Māori and Pacific students. To be sustainable in the equity
fight, we need to have a diverse group of
optometrists.”
Vision Bus Aotearoa is currently funded
entirely through philanthropy, by the Fehl family, the Blake
family, Essilor (a world leader in prescription lenses) and
the Buchanan Charitable Foundation.
The hope is
that the model the bus supports - delivering eye-health
services in partnership with local communities - will be
widely adopted and state-funded in the
future.
- Find out more at visionbus.ac.nz
- Support the Vision Bus here.