Christmas Comes Early For Vision Impaired In Vanuata
MEDIA RELEASE
04 October 2011
Christmas Comes Early For Vision Impaired In Vanuata
New Zealand team returns from life-changing outreach
More than 70
vision impaired people in Vanuatu have had their
eyesight
restored and can see their family and friends
again thanks to an
outreach clinic run by The Fred
Hollows Foundation NZ.
after realising she can see following
cataract
surgery.
More than
70 vision impaired people in Vanuatu have had their
eyesight
restored and can see their family and friends
again thanks to an
outreach clinic run by The Fred
Hollows Foundation NZ.
Christchurch local Ian Russell,
co-owner and optometrist at Specsavers
Hornby, was
selected to go on the six-day trip to Vanuatu and was
blown
away by the reaction of the Vanuatu patients and
communities he helped.
"The impact was phenomenal. I
think we all expected to see some
wonderful things take
place during the outreach but nothing could have
prepared
us for the overwhelming sense of joy and celebration that
came
from the entire community when they realised
someone's sight had been
restored," said Mr
Russell.
"Most of the people we saw had been
unnecessarily blind or vision
impaired for many years
because of cataracts or other treatable
conditions. For
some, this was the only opportunity to receive
treatment
and that was a very humbling experience. I
wanted to do all I could to
help."
Mr Russell joined
a team of seven Pacific Island eye doctors and
nurses,
which also included fellow Canterbrian
ophthalmologist Allan Simpson
from Southern Eye
Specialists. The outreach teams performed
eyesight
testing and eye surgeries for those with poor
vision.
"One lady I saw, Mary Iakawak, had cataracts in
both eyes and had been
completely blind for a year and
unable to see her young grandchild. She
had travelled by
boat and plane to the clinic from her home on
Tanna
Island, arriving a month before we got there
because she was so eager to
see and knew this was her
only hope," said Mr Russell.
"When Mary had the
operation and could see again she was
absolutely
ecstatic! She almost didn't want to get her
hopes up going into the
surgery, but as soon as she was
out and we took the bandage off she was
so excited that
she was going to be able to cook and look after
her
family again."
Dr John Szetu, Director of the
Pacific Eye Institute in Fiji headed up
the trip. He has
restored sight to more than 20,000 people across
the
Pacific in his 20-year career and knows the profound
joy you feel when
you have played a part in restoring
someone's sight.
"Each screening or surgery has a
ripple effect right through these
communities; people get
their independence back - they can work again,
look after
their families and enjoy all that life has to offer," said
Dr
Szetu.
"We were all just so thrilled to give
something back to this nation. The
outreach came at just
the right time, with Christmas just around the
corner it
will truly be a festive celebration to remember for
these
families."
ends