Tackling avoidable blindness in the Pacific
Tackling avoidable blindness in the Pacific has seen great progress thanks to the support from The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust to The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ
The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust works with partners throughout the Commonwealth to eliminate avoidable blindness and has been supporting the diabetes eye disease programme of The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ since 2015.
Working with local Ministries of Health, the Trust-supported programme was rolled out in six Commonwealth countries throughout the Pacific – Fiji, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Kiribati, Samoa and Tonga – and has seen great success.
Diabetes eye disease is a complication of diabetes and is the leading cause of blindness globally in working-age adults. With the Pacific being home to nine out of 10 countries with the highest incidence of diabetes in the world, it is crucial that effective diabetes and diabetes eye disease services are provided to prevent vision loss.
The goal of the
Trust-supported programme was to help prevent diabetes eye
disease amongst people living in the Pacific. Since 2015
successes include:
• 42,908 patients across all
six Pacific countries have been screened for diabetes eye
disease.
• 7,237 patients have received
sight-saving laser treatments to prevent permanent blindness
from diabetes.
• 448 locally led diabetes eye
disease outreaches across the Pacific have made screening
and treatment services available to over 13,600 patients
from remote areas and outer islands.
• 1,236
primary health clinicians and 854 community health workers
have been trained in diabetes eye care awareness and primary
eye care.
Andrew Bell, Executive Director of The Fred
Hollows Foundation NZ, says, “We would like to express our
sincere gratitude to The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee
Trust for their incredible support of our diabetes eye
disease programme. As you can see from these outstanding
achievements, we have made great progress in tackling
diabetes eye disease in some of the remotest parts of the
Pacific and we simply would not have been able to reach as
many patients and health workers without the support of The
Trust.”
Although The Foundation will continue to run the diabetes eye disease programme throughout the Pacific, a celebration was held last night in Fiji to mark the end of The Trust’s contribution in the region and celebrate the amazing achievements that have been realised over the last four years with The Trust’s support.
The event was hosted by Dr Astrid Bonfield, Chief Executive of The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust in Suva, Fiji.
“It has been a true privilege to work
alongside The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ to together seek to
ensure that people living in some of the most remote
communities of the Commonwealth, at risk of diabetes eye
disease, can access the quality sight-saving screening and
treatment they need. The Trust has had as its mission to
leave a lasting legacy, owned by the Commonwealth, in honour
of Her Majesty The Queen. The positive impact this programme
has had on thousands of lives across the Pacific, and will
continue to have for years to come, is precisely that legacy
– and one that could not make us more proud.”
Andrew Bell, Executive Director of The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ, and Dr Astrid Bonfield, Chief Executive of The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust
ENDS
Notes to
Editors
The Fred Hollows Foundation
NZ
The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ carries on the
work of a legendary New Zealander, the late Professor Fred
Hollows. Fred was an internationally acclaimed eye surgeon
and social justice activist who championed the right of all
people to high quality and affordable eye care.
The Fred
Hollows Foundation NZ works in the Pacific where four out of
five people who are blind don’t need to be; their
condition is preventable or treatable. We restore sight to
the needlessly blind and vision impaired, train local eye
health specialists to provide eye care services in their own
communities and work to strengthen local health systems to
achieve access to quality eye
care.hollows.org.nz
The Queen Elizabeth Diamond
Jubilee Trust
The Queen Elizabeth Diamond
Jubilee Trust is a charitable foundation established in 2012
by Commonwealth Heads of Government to mark and celebrate
Her Majesty The Queen’s 60-year contribution to the
Commonwealth at the time of her Diamond Jubilee. The Trust
has received donations from governments, corporate partners,
trusts, foundations, community groups and individuals from
across the Commonwealth, and its programmes work in alliance
towards ending avoidable blindness and to empower a new
generation of young leaders.
In January 2020, the Trust
will have successfully completed its time-limited programmes
and will cease operating as a grant-making organisation. It
will have achieved a significant, sustainable reduction in
avoidable blindness across the Commonwealth, saving millions
from losing their sight, and created and developed a cadre
of remarkable young leaders as a legacy in honour of Her
Majesty The Queen as Head of the Commonwealth. www.jubileetribute.org
ends