Tag: blindness

  • FG signs new MoU to tackle preventable blindness in Nigeria

    FG signs new MoU to tackle preventable blindness in Nigeria

    Amid reports that more than 23 million Nigerians are living with one form of vision impairment or another, the Federal Government has taken a major step toward ending preventable blindness by signing a new national eye-care Memorandum of Understanding with Peek Vision.

    The partnership aims to transform how millions of Nigerians with vision impairment are identified, monitored, and connected to appropriate care.

    Signed in Abuja on Tuesday, the agreement is designed to close persistent gaps in eye-care access, particularly in rural and underserved communities where many people live with avoidable blindness but are never screened or linked to treatment.

    The Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Dr Adekunle Salako, who endorsed the pact on behalf of the federal government, said the initiative would significantly expand Nigeria’s capacity to reach people at the last mile.

    He noted that the country has a history of innovative eye-care programmes, recalling the popular JigiBola initiative of the early 1990s in Lagos State, which provided glasses to thousands of residents.

     According to him, the new digital platform introduced through the MoU builds on that legacy by enabling health workers to identify people who need help and connect them directly to services.

    While emphasizing that misinformation and fear prevent many patients from seeking care early, the Ministry expressed optimism that the partnership will help solve this challenge by improving communication, screening, and referral systems nationwide.

    Salako explained that the agreement aligns with the government’s Renewable Health Connect initiative, which focuses on school-based screening, cataract services, and the provision of corrective lenses. 

    He assured that the Ministry is committed to driving full implementation, saying the programme would ensure that technology reaches communities that have historically been left behind.

    Speaking after the signing, the Founder and CEO of Peek Vision, Prof Andrew Bastawrous, said the initiative was driven by the urgent need to reach millions of Nigerians who live with avoidable vision loss but lack access to treatment.

     Most people with vision loss, particularly those in rural areas of low income, don’t know that they can be treated, don’t know where to go to get treatment if they are aware, and can’t access those services, he said.

    The partnership, he said, brings together the Ministry and leading international NGOs including Sightsavers, CBM, and Hands. 

    Under the arrangement, trained personnel will use smartphones and tablets to deliver accurate vision screening directly in homes, workplaces, and schools. 

    Bastawrous said this eliminates reliance on health facilities, “Because if you find them and they don’t receive treatment, you’ve solved nothing,” he noted.

    According to him, Peek Vision has developed a data platform that monitors every screened individual, tracks referrals, and identifies reasons why people fail to attend appointments

    Bastawrous explained how data-driven insights have solved similar challenges in Kenya, where fears, myths, and cost barriers were identified and addressed through targeted interventions. 

    The power of data is to point to where the problem is. The power of compassion is to respond, he said.

    He confirmed that the Nigerian rollout begins immediately and involves no direct financial commitment from the Federal Government.

    Peek Vision will be supported by its international partners, while the Ministry retains full ownership of all data generated. 

    He said a new programme supported by Sightsavers has already begun, screening 5,000 people and targeting 1.2 million schoolchildren over the next two years.

    Bastawrous added that the broader impact of improved vision goes beyond health, “Something as simple as a pair of magnifying glasses, which many people aren’t aware of, can increase learning potential by 20 to 50 percent. Yet remain inaccessible to people of all ages,” he said.

    He noted that cataracts remain the most common cause of blindness but are fully treatable, warning that most Nigerians with cataracts today may die without ever receiving care unless the system changes. 

    To date, he said, technology deployed through Peek Vision and its partners has screened 17 million people globally and connected more than 1.5 million to sight-restoring treatment.

    Today marks the beginning of that journey to change that story, he said.

  • As blindness leads to new visions

    As blindness leads to new visions

    On a scale of comparison for complexity and complication, this outgoing year will go down as one of the most intriguing and perplexing since the dawn of civilization. Despite his reputation for higher intelligence, the human species has not demonstrated much intelligence when and where it comes to organizing and ordering his own affairs.

     Despite specks of brilliant developments which may eliminate famine and hunger in the most developed parts of the world, there is also growing evidence of a universal collapse of charity and the human capacity to understand and tolerate each other as seen in person to person, nation to nation, religion to religion and race to race relationship. It is this fundamental character defect of unemotional intelligence which holds the key to further human capacity building and not startling ll advancement.

     We can understand the plight of Africa and the capacity to shock the rest of the world with pristine savagery. Sudan has not had a functioning state for over a year, but it is in excellent company. All over the continent, statehood is a fluid and volatile business which often exchanges batons with anarchy or organized official banditry.

    But how does the civilized world explain the horrific and apocalyptic carnage of Gaza Strip as Israel pounds the Hamas overlords into submission? How does the slow-motion destruction of Ukraine which has been going on for almost two years now while the civilized world watches in powerless perdition make sense? With the stricken people of Gaza reverting to sign language and primitive modes of transportation, a dawn of de-civilization appears to be underway in the area.

     Some analysts have contended that the appalling human mess such as we are witnessing the world over is nature’s way of asserting its suzerainty over human affairs and of curbing our illusion that we are on our way to becoming undisputed masters of the universe. The human species murdered and pillaged its way into universal dominion over other contending hominids. The logic and manner of ascendancy and domination is unlikely to end with our species.

      What we are witnessing may well be a replay of that struggle for the survival of the fittest at another level. At the end of it all, the human species may become so enervated and exhausted that it may pave the way for the emergence of another master species already lurking in the shadow; or out of sheer apathy and weariness humankind may suddenly be surprised into submission by its own creation on a clear beautiful day.

    Read Also; 3,413 inmates currently on death row, says NCoS boss

       The Middle East gave human civilization its two most powerful and successful religions to date. They do not derive their power and achievement from the beauty of their message or the transcendental scope of their vision of humanity, but from their capacity for organized violence and relentless militarization of conversion.

    When the capacity of one to enforce its universal writ petered out outside the gates of Vienna after slogging it all the way from conquered Constantinople, the other took over. The world would never be the same again.

       From there, it was a straightforward route over the Dark Age to the Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution. The interplay of fortuitous forces and geographical placement as well as the fact that historically Western Europe was on the periphery of classical feudalism pushed the continent ahead of other continents in the sweepstakes of modernization and its booty. The discovery of the two continents of America followed and the creeping colonization of Africa commenced.

        Almost two thousand years after being expelled from their ancestral homestead, the Israelites are back in the same place but this time as a conquering colonial power themselves. There is no other way Israel can sustain its brutal writ and iron grip over the Gaza Strip without assuming the formal trappings of a colonizing imperium. The Israelis groaned and wailed under the savage yoke of their Roman conquerors. Now it is the turn of their Arab cousins.

      The same goes for Russia and its cruel exertions in its former colony, Ukraine. For centuries until the Soviet Union imploded, the Ukrainians felt the icy grip of their powerful Slavic cousins. It is an understatement to aver that Russia covets Ukrainian riches and stupendous human resources and is willing to ignore ineffectual international condemnation to achieve its objective.

    It is on record that Vladimir Putin considers the collapse of the Soviet Empire as the greatest geopolitical catastrophe to have befallen his country in the modern era. This enthusiasm is not shared by most Ukrainians who regard themselves as more politically advanced and culturally sophisticated than their Russian relations. The average Russian balks at this, claiming that the veneer and gloss of modern civilization paraded by Ukraine is a result of Russian generosity and labour.

      The situation is thus set for a duel onto death and a collision of altars which can only end in conquest and submission rather than negotiation and conciliation. Russia does not seem to mind Ukraine disintegrating after seizing a huge chunk of the nation. But to maintain its vice grip and give its dominion a semblance of statehood, Russia would have to take on the role of a colonizing emporium for the second time.

      The rest of the world is compelled to look askance, given the growing impotence of the UN and its utter powerlessness when it comes to dealing with the superpowers. Hobbled by its manifest frailties, the African Union lacks the voice and the gravitas to intervene in any matter. Haven gone through a disastrous run of incompetent leadership caused by cronyism and chumminism, Great Britain is understandably quiet and supine.

     France is chafing and chomping having been expelled from its overseas holding which it has milked without any milk of human kindness for centuries. Emmanuel Macron appears to have lost a bit of his bounce and swerve after his brinkmanship failed so disastrously in Niger Republic. The French extreme right is not taking all this lying low.

       A leading light has suggested the equivalent of the guillotine treatment for Emmanuel Macron for losing the plot in Africa and for letting the much despised Black people unto the secret of their misery and historic privation. This coming from the country of liberte, egalite, and fraternite is a new low in a history of arrogant duplicity and deviousness.

      It is noteworthy that after the French were ejected, Niger became the fastest growing economy in the world. One can imagine what a vast difference this new found wealth will make to the fortunes of the average Nigeriene if it does not disappear into private pockets. So much for colonial exploitation and brigandage.

       As the memorable year swings to a close, the question on everybody’s lips is who will redeem western inspired civilization as we know it from its self-inflicted wounds? Certainly not America which prides itself on its own Exceptionalism and messianic destiny. America is in danger of imploding from its own contradictions, particularly from the unresolved National Question about whether a nation laying claim to universal freedom of humanity can also play host to such dehumanizing inequities and survive.

      The land of the founding fathers, of Washington, Jefferson, Jay, Hamilton and all those heroic figures who cobbled together a new type of nation is in critical danger of a swift descent into an authoritarian distemper the like of which these sages and avatars could not have contemplated. In Donald Trump, the descendant of an immigrant from Germany who was expelled for draft-dodging, America seems to have found its nemesis.

     If Trump prevails in next year’s poll, the enlightened wager is that America may dissolve into anarchy with the possibility of the entire nation being consumed in a secessionist conflagration. A toxic and polarizing conman, Trump had already caused enough division in the land to last a whole generation, and that is if it survives him.

       America is a victim of its own success. By forcibly homogenizing several disparate entities under the rubric of a new type of human society with democratic ideals and under the capitalist ethos of life more abundant for everybody, Uncle Sam was tempting fate too hard.

    In such circumstances, something must give as harsh realities confront visionary daydreaming, rendering the whole project nugatory. Yet as the American project has taught the world no nation can move forward without some visionary daydreaming and Utopian yearning encapsulated in the thoughts and vision of its founding fathers.

        In local parlance, the masquerade that arrives early to the village dancing square to exhibit his skills will soon join them in the spectators’ stand.  Several novel types of human societies are visible in the horizon threatening to put paid to the dominance of America and other western nation-types. First, is the Israeli-type messianic warrior-nation based on permanent mobilization of the people for war and unending strife and buoyed by the Masada complex of fighting to the last man.

      Second is the Chinese model of mobilizing the entire society for progress and enhanced prosperity which is powered by Confucius-inspired State Capitalism disguised as Communism. Within seventy years of its existence, China has lifted almost ninety percent of its people out of poverty. Politically, the society is more cohesive and economically less polarized.

     The tradeoff is a harshly authoritarian climate which brooks no dissent or political rascality. The bet is that as the society becomes more prosperous and economically independent, questions will be asked. But it should not be forgotten that this is a malleable, docile and acquiescent society which sees the state as a benevolent and caring father-figure. The modern rulers of China seem to have plugged all the loopholes of mainstream dissent. Tiananmen Square is almost thirty five remote years in memory. The youthful veterans of that remarkable uprising have become potbellied elders in exile.  

    Fourth is the Arab miracle of the Emirates where remarkable discipline and focus anchored on a skilled devolution of economic, political and military power among the emirates has managed to clear away within a generation centuries of feudalistic accretions and their cobwebs leading to startling modernization and an investment capitalism which has turned Dubai into a global powerhouse of financial wheeling and dealing.  Six decades ago, the entire country was a fetid feudal back wood bristling with sand and dunes. Today, the glitzy emporium and glittering skyline of the postmodern city of Dubai rival any Western capital.

      Finally, there is the frankly authoritarian but prudent, Spartan and economically disciplined state of Singapore which has managed to transit to the First World from the Third World in a single generation. When it was summarily expelled from Malaysia, Singapore was a festering colonial backwater swarming with slums and shanties. With pride and fierce determination, Lee Kuan Yew seized it by the scruff of the neck dragging it to modernity by  force.

      Today, Singapore feels better than most Western nations and its infrastructure vastly superior. There are also stand-between societies such as the Japanese and South Korean whose elite are culturally driven by a sense of what is right and proper and will do the needful if they are adjudged to have contravened societal norms.  

    Unfortunately, while the world is stirring and creating itself anew amidst many conflagrations, Africa has been missing on this radar, this stellar congregation of transformational leadership. To suggest that Africa has not produced its own fair share of transformational leadership would amount to a genetic scandal. Where will one put the Nkrumahs, the Awolowos, the Cabral, the Nyereres and the Samoras?

       In retrospect, it would appear that the cultural and tribal obstacles that some of these avatars rightly identified as barriers to genuine nationhood returned to haunt their aspirations because the solutions they offered could not withstand the difficulties on ground.  What is playing out in many African nations attests to the fact that in multi-ethnic nations with religious and cultural fissures, it is often very difficult to produce a leader with a transcendental vision of his society who also transformational.

       But to produce a nation or a society worthy of global admiration and emulation, a pacesetter for jaded humanity, postcolonial Africa must come up with this stellar combination: a leadership with a cosmopolitan vision that transcends narrow ethnic and cultural divides and the intellectual strength and energy to transform his nation.   

  • Blindness: Optometrists caution against artificial eye lashes, mascara

    The Nigeria Optometric Association, Enugu State Chapter (NOAESC) have advised teenagers to shun activities that can damage their eyes including artificial eye lashes, mascara and tampering with eye lids.

    The optometrists made the call during sensitization of students of some selected secondary schools in Enugu State on Thursday to educate them on the need to care for their eyes.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the theme for the programme is ‘The need to pay attention to childhood blindness and eye care services.’

    NAN reports that the association visited Government Secondary School, Abakaliki Road, Enugu.

    Dr. Gilbert Enechi, the team leader at the GSS, Enugu, said they focused on teenagers this year because they engaged in certain habits that could cause eye blindness and prevent them from attaining their goals in life.

    Enechi, who is the Chief Optometrist, College of Medicine, University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), urged students to also stay away from frequent scratching of their eyes.

    “As future leaders of tomorrow, these our young ones still have a long way to go in their career path and how far they will go depends largely on the perfect state of their eyes.

    “Students engage in certain activities that can damage the eyes but which were often thought to have no effect on the eyes.

    “Some of the practices involve reading while facing up, frequent scratching of the eyes, using of eye glasses not recommended, reading in a poorly lit environment and straining of the eyes.

    “Others are the use of fireworks, knockouts and the application of foreign objects such as eye lashes, mascara and turning the eye lids inside out which causes allergies and eventually aggravate to eye defects.

    “Eye defects common among students and teenagers are glaucoma, progenital cataract, crossed eyes, astynopia, astigmatism, short and long sightedness.” he said.

    Dr. Enechi, therefore, said the easiest way to detect any of the eye defects was to make use of the visual acuity chart available to the school by standing six meters and closing one of the eyes.

    The Chief Optometrist, therefore, said early detection and treatment would help prevent total blindness promising to offer students free eye care treatment.

    “It will interest you to know that there are 500,000 cases of childhood blindness yearly and 60 per cent of them eventually die of the cause of blindness.”

    READ ALSO: Macular hole causes blindness, Optometrist warns

    Enechi also seized the opportunity to enjoin students to consider being Optometrists as a career and help cover the numerical gap of Optometrists that Nigeria needs to adequately cater for its citizens.

    The principal of GSS, Mr Onyia Ifeanyi, appreciated NOESC for the initiative saying he was delighted that the world was beginning to shift attention to eye care needs of students and the young ones.

    Onyia noted that with the sensitization, the notion that eye defects in young ones are hereditary and not caused by certain habits and behaviours would be corrected.

    The Senior Prefect of the school, Miss Otoo Eva-Akunna said she was privileged to have been sensitized because she had thought that her frequent itching of the eyes were normal.

    “My parents used to say it was because of the insect that entered my eyes a long time ago but with this sensitization, I now know there is the need for me to go for treatment.

    “I need my eyes more now and I need to treat it before it deteriorates and cause more expenses in the form of surgery.” Miss Otoo said.

    The sensitization programme taking place in the three senatorial district of Enugu State is part of the many activities lined up for the 2019 World Optometrist Week which began on March 26, 2019 and ends on March 30.

  • ‘80 % of blindness preventable, treatable’

    About  80 percent of cases of blindness could be avoided, treated or prevented, experts at the MeCure Eye Centre, Mecure Health Care Limited, Oshodi, Lagos, have said.

    According to them, Nigerians should be able to identify symptoms of eye diseases and report them immediately.

    The doctors stated this at the free eye test organised by the centre as part of activities marking the World Sight Day.

    Dr Adegboyega Alabi, a Consultant Ophthalmologist with the centre, said ignorance has led most people to total blindness while some were being ostracised for an ailment that could be treated.

    Alabi said: ‘’We discovered that a lot of people are not aware that there is a proper and standard treatment for cataract, for instance. We see people being blind from cataract for several years and they are just kept in one room somewhere, ostracised from the community. Sometimes when they come to us, we always wonder at their late presentation and they will be telling us they have been afflicted with it for five years.After thorough examination and they have the appropriate treatment and we tell them they will start seeing again, they are always excited.

    “That means they wasted four to five years of their life because that period that they were blind from cataract they were ostracised from  the society and some of them when they are treated it will be difficult for them to get reintegrated into the society because they have been deprived of that opportunity.  ’ said Alabi.

    Alabi, however, added that 90 percent of the blind are in the developing world, such as Nigeria and Africa at large, which brings the importance of celebrating the world sight day to create awareness and providing free eye test for the general public.

    “From our own environment, we discovered that 90 percent of blind people are in developing world; of course Africa and Nigeria are inclusive and that brings to fore the importance of celebrating this occasion in this part of the world and by MeCure. That is why we decided this year to celebrate the World Sight Day by organising the free eye programme for the general public,” Dr Alabi explained.

    Head of Strategy and Commercial Service MeCure Medical Centre, Dr Adekunle Megbuwawon, advised that people should endeavour to go for eye checks yearly

    He said: “One of the things MeCure is doing right now is preventive health check, our body is like the ice berg and by the time you see the ice berg that destroys  titanic, it looks like a small stone but underneath is a huge rock. Our body is the same way, when things are going on in the body most time, we don’t know because they are not visible but by the time it will show as a symptom at that point it has gone very far. So, one of the things we advocate is promotion of preventive healthc are. You need to do annual health screening. In fact, we have made the annual health screening so cheap that the layman on the street can do about 60 investigations at a very low cost. We are even doing raffle draw so that people can come and do it,” said  Megbuwawon, added.

  • Air Force builds data base to combat Glaucoma

    Air Force builds data base to combat Glaucoma

    In order to prevent blindness caused by Glaucoma among personnel and their families, the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has commenced data accumulation on the disease at all its command.

    Chief of the Air Staff (CAS) Air Marshal Sadiq Abubakar said this Tuesday in Lagos, during an awareness and enforcement campaign against Glaucoma blindness.

    Abubakar, who was represented by the Air Officer Commanding (AOC) Logistics Command, Air Vice Marshal (AVM) Ibrahim Yahaya, said the data would assist the service in the expansion and upgrade of its facilities to effectively tackle the condition.

    Themed “winning the war against Glaucoma blindness,” the lecture was organised by the NAF headquarters in conjunction with 561 NAF Hospital, Ikeja.

    The Nation reports that free eye screening for personnel and their families were conducted, free drugs distributed to persons with eye defects, while those with surgical or advance optical conditions were referred to the hospital for free treatments.

    The CAS said: “We want them to check their eyes to ensure there are no cases of Glaucoma, and if any, fight it. Glaucoma blindness is preventable if detected early.

    “Secondly, we are trying to build a data bank on personnel, both serving and retired with Glaucoma, as well as those without it. Such data bank would help us plan appropriately on how to expand our facilities and equip them for better service delivery.

    “The eye is a vital organ and I do not think anyone would want to lose his/her eye if they had a choice. We do Glaucoma awareness annually. We did one in March, but this time around, we decided to embark on awareness and enforcement campaign in all the commands.

    “It has been done in Makurdi and Kaduna. Lagos was the third place and I am sure they would proceed to Yenagoa in Bayelsa State and Bauchi.”

    Earlier, Chief of Medical Services, AVM Sale Shinkafi, who was represented by Air Commodore Mohammed Shaibu said the NAF had over the years, provided preventive and curative medical services.

    He said: “But like you are all aware, preventive services are cheaper and some of those medical conditions are preventable. Blindness from Glaucoma is preventable and the best prevention is early diagnosis.

    “Glaucoma does not have symptoms and that is why we have encouraged our people to have their eyes checked once a year because once the blindness comes, it is permanent. Blindness from Glaucoma has no remedy.

    “We try to bring in these training programmes early enough so that these conditions can be identified in good time. We would not want to wait until they are fully established before offering treatment.

    “The medical services are free. The checkups and drugs, eyeglasses are free. Those who require surgical treatments would also get that for free because the CAS has made adequate provisions for it. That is why it is important to have records of those with this problem.”

    According to Shinkafi, the enormity of the problem determines how often the Air Force engages in campaign to combat it, adding that the ratio of Glacoma among personnel and their families was a reflection of what is obtained in the society at large.”

    In his opening remark, the Commander, 561 NAF Hospital, Air Commodore Benjamin Okunola said the campaign was a demonstration of the Air Chief’s commitment to ensure that officers, men of the NAF and their families were in good health

     

  • ‘Regular checks, prompt treatment ‘ll stop blindness’

    ‘Regular checks, prompt treatment ‘ll stop blindness’

    The statistics of those who go blind from avoidable causes is scary. Some have lost their sight to ignorance. Ophthalmologists, however, believe they are misinformed about eye care. They think the situation can be corrected if people visit their eye doctors for regular checks. WALE ADEPOJU writes   

    Mr Adelani Adebesin (not real name) lost his sight to glaucoma. He was an insurance officer bubbling with life when it happened.

    He thought it was the handiwork of his enemies and forces beyond his control. But, investigation by ophthalmologists, who attended to him after the loss showed it was caused by glaucoma.

    Glaucoma is a disease, according to experts, is a ‘silent thief of the eye’.

    Unknowingly, many Nigerians are living with this problem.

    Another pitiable story was that of Mrs Chioma Onu, who lost her vision to cataract. She had complained to her husband that her vision was failing. Her eyes were  blurry gradually. But she kept to herself afterwards, thinking that it will soon go away. When it didn’t, she applied some local preparation on it. But unknown to her, the condition was at an advanced stage. Family members and friends urged her to seek the help of a doctor, but by then, it was a little too late. She lost her sight to cataract, a condition described by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as the major cause of blindness.

    Like Mr Adebesin, many people who lost their sight to glaucoma, do not know they have the condition.

    And many of them delay their treatment by wishing their problems away.

    Glaucoma is one of many causes of blindness. The others are cataract, which is the leading cause of blindness, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), corneal opacities, diabetic retinopathy, childhood blindness, trachoma and onchocerciasis.

    Ophthalmologists, however, believe that people can prevent sudden loss of sight by having regular eye checks.

    The National Blindness and Visual Impairment Survey in Nigeria conducted between 2005 and 2007 says 84 per cent of blindness was due to avoidable causes.

    A consultant ophthalmologist at Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Prof Adebukunola Adefule-Ositelu, said: “It is people’s rights to have good vision. It is also their right to have functional vision”.

    The awareness, she said, is increasing and, as such, people are  realising that their eye problems are not caused by fetish means or witchcraft.

    She urged people to seek treatment from the real care eye givers, which leaders are, the ophthalmologists.

    “They should make sure they see them. But when there are no ophthalmologists around they should go to their health centres, where their concerns can be addressed.

    “So, if they need to be referred, they would be referred. But they should not take their eye health for granted because they can lose it,” Prof Adefula-Ositelu said.

    Ophthalmologists, she said, see a lot of patients with irritation, dust and dryness.

    “Now that everybody is using generators, there is also an increase in eye problems because of the fumes. They can get irritation; otherwise, the most common eye disease, these days, is cataract,” she said.

    Why? She said: “This is so because it is more common with ageing. As people grow older, there are changes in the body. The eye also ages as people age.

    “Apart from cataract, there is also glaucoma, which is more serious with black people. Its incidence is increasing in the country. Before parents don’t tell their children about their eye problem. But today, they tell them so that they too could get screened for the condition.”

    She said visual impairment cases are decreasing, but it seems they are actually increasing because “more people are becoming aware of the problem and are seeking help from doctors”.

  • Over one million Nigerians suffer blindness—Ophthalmological Society

    The Ophthalmological Society of Nigeria (OSN) said on Friday in Jos that no fewer than one million Nigerians suffer from one form of blindness or the other.

    According to Prof. Sebastin Nwosu, OSN President, the figure was based on a research conducted in 2008.

    Nwosu, who read a communiqué issued at OSN general and scientific conference in Jos, said that 50 per cent of the number were caused by cataract alone.

    He said that glaucoma, and several other factors were responsible for the remaining 50 per cent.

    The OSN president said that three million Nigerians suffer partial blindness, a situation that could be corrected if proper treatment was done.

    He revealed that 42 out of every 1,000 Nigerians are blind, pointing out that the distribution varied from one geographical area of the country to the other.

    While cataract is age related, genetic factors, as well as human life styles, also result to blindness in some cases, he said.

    Nwosu said that this year’s theme of the conference, `Building Partnership for Eye Care’ was strategic in placing and repositioning eye care.

    He said that partnership was strategic in placing and repositioning eye care in the front burner in respect of the priority agenda of both Government and the NGOs.

    The OSN president said that the body had developed an alliance with the media to gain a platform to raise public awareness on the problem of visual disability, with a view to alleviating the problems. (NAN)

  • Thousands of Ebola survivors face severe pain, possible blindness

    Thousands of Ebola survivors face severe pain, possible blindness

    Thousands of West Africans who were infected with the Ebola virus, but survived it, are suffering chronic conditions, such as serious joint pain and eye inflammation that can lead to blindness, global health experts said yesterday.

    Ebola survivors who fought off the most severe bouts of infection are the most likely to suffer ongoing medical problems, World Health Organization experts said, and their health is becoming “an emergency within an emergency”.

    “The world has never seen such a large number of survivors from an Ebola outbreak,” said Anders Nordstrom, a WHO representative in Sierra Leone who took part in a five-day conference this week about Ebola survivors.

    “We have 13,000 survivors in the three countries (Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone). This is new – both from a medical and from a societal point of view,” he told reporters on a telebriefing.

    Daniel Bausch of the WHO’s clinical care team on Ebola survivors said about half of all those who fought off the virus now report joint pain, with some suffering such severe effects that they can’t work.

    Eye problems including inflammation, impaired vision and – in severe but rare cases – blindness, have been reported by about 25 percent of survivors, Bausch said.

    Less measurable but equally serious long-term problems, such as increasing rates of depression, post traumatic stress disorder and social exclusion, are also affecting survivors.

    Since West Africa’s devastating Ebola epidemic was by far the largest ever seen – infecting more than 27,000 people and killing almost 11,300 of them – scientists are not able to say whether survivors’ chronic health problems are unusual.

    The Ebola virus is thought to be able to survive no more than 21 days in most body fluids, such as blood and vomit, which are the primary means of transmission.

    But it is also known to be able to lurk in semen and in the soft tissues of the eye for up to several months after recovery.

    Scientists believe the vision impairments reported by survivors of the current outbreak are probably linked to the virus persisting in the eyes.

    Bausch said sight problems, joint pain and headaches have been reported in a few survivors of previous outbreaks since the disease was first detected in 1976. But past epidemics were much smaller, meaning survivor numbers were too small to study or draw any meaningful scientific conclusions.

  • Hope for visually impaired

    Hope for visually impaired

    With the increase in beggars on the street of various countries, including Nigeria, a headset that takes visually impaired people around cities has been designed by Microsoft.

    The headset was invented by a Neuroscientist, Sheila Nirenberg, who found a technique that promises to treat blindness.

    The neuroscientist ventured into the world of the blinds in search of technological innovations that would help restore hope to the blind by cracking the brain’s visual code.

    Worthy of mention is the fact that each time you seat before a computer, operate your mobile phone or view anything bright under the sun, your eyes are doing a remarkable thing.

    In this situation, a stream of light from the words and pictures bounces into the eyeballs, falling onto photoreceptor cells on the retina.

    Nirenberg, a neuroscientist, Weill Medical College at Cornell University claims that this visual information is passed on to output cells and then transmitted to the brain as a kind of code, where it is reconstructed to make up the letters in this sentence you are reading right now.

    However, she further maintained that degenerative eye diseases can wreck havoc on this process. When they damage the retina, the image in front of you never gets further than the eyeball; the chain is broken.

    A report from the genius behind defends that, this is what makes the technology that Nirenberg has built rather remarkable. She has found a way to transmit a visual code directly to the brain, bypassing damaged cells in the eye. In other words, she can help the blind see again.

  • Ravages  of river blindness

    Ravages of river blindness

    Nigerians’ spirited battle against a debilitating disease

    Hauwa, a 74-year- old widow is going blind. Gradually, the brightly lit world that she sees every time she opens her eyes is thinning out of sight. “The doctor said that in a few months, I could go blind,” she said staring miserably into the night. Think how sad it must be  for her. Think how excruciating it must be to wait silently for that moment when her eyes would totally fail her. Imagine how hurtful it could be if your ability to see depends on some elusive elixir or life-saving medication that is not yet within your reach.

    But you are not Hauwa and you are not blind, hence you  may never understand what it feels like to suddenly develop lesions in your eyes and a creepy rash all over your body. You couldn’t decipher even if you try, how it is to lose weight, develop sunken eyes and lose appetite for food you erstwhile loved to eat. Unlike the 74-year-old native of Taraba river valley, Taraba State, you may never understand how it is to lust for sight and hopelessly lose it.

    Swathed in a thick, dusty blanket, Hauwa cut the picture of a child yet to recite her first happy rhyme. ‘Awake, it always feels like I am falling asleep,’ she said. Asleep, she probably prefers her dreams, even if quick with monsters, to the world with all its breakable joys, killer-diseases and compacts with the dying.

    Afusatu, her 26-year- old grandchild revealed that she was diagnosed with Onchocerciasis two years ago. “Ever since, she said she has accepted her fate and that she would not subject herself to any medical treatment because her best friend who died last year could not regain her sight despite going through a painful surgery to regain her sight,” she said.

    Safiya’s case is remarkably different from Hauwa’s. Narrating her grandfather’s painful experience with the disease, she recalled, life for him was very difficult and sad. “He had me constantly beside him but even though I was only 10 years old, I could always guess that he was lonely and sad. Eventually, he died from a severe fever. He died an angry and unhappy man,” she said.

    Narrating her cruel encounter with the disease, Safiya disclosed that after her grandfather’s death, she relocated to live with her aunt two settlements away from her village but unknown to her, the black flies causing the disease spared no one even in her new abode. “It was like everyone of us were silently waiting for our time to go blind. We had tried several herbal remedies but none seemed to have worked in curing us of the disease,” she said.

    Over the years, Safiya got married and had four kids but trouble loomed when she started to itch terribly all over her body. The constant itching got worse and developed into sores as she continued to scratch it. This caused a lot of bleeding that led to very ugly scars and wounds on her arms, legs and buttocks. It eventually cost Safiya her sight and her marriage.

    Such painful experiences resonate the buried and often unheard narratives of several sufferers of river blindness across the country. However, unlike Hauwa and Safiya, Lt. General Theophillus Danjuma(rtd.) had a life-changing encounter with the disease. According to him, his personal experience with onchocerciasis was not as a policy maker, scientist or medical doctor, but as a patient. “In 1964, I led my company of soldiers on foot for two weeks on a flag march along the Nigeria-Cameroun border, sleeping roughly in tents.  Two years later, I woke up one morning with red swollen eyes and very itchy body. At Guinness Eye Hospital, Kaduna, Professor Bhar took a skin snip of my skin from my hip, applied some chemicals to it, placed it under the microscope and asked me to look at it.

    “To this day I shiver whenever I recall the sheer number of very long worms that I saw swimming on that tiny piece of my skin. My treatment then lasted two weeks. When four months later I was nominated to attend the  Army Staff College in Carberly, England, I collected a medical report from Prof. Bhar to confirm my state of health. There was tremendous excitement in the eye of medical community at the prospect of seeing and probably treating an Onchocerciasis patient. I was attended to by no less than five Professors. I later understood that a room full of medical students were waiting to also see me if I had been found positive. They were sorely disappointed; Prof. Bhar had already cured me,” he disclosed.

    The experience exerted far-reaching influence on Lt. Gen Danjuma and he eventually got involved in the control of river blindness. Thus in 1995, he donated a second hand four wheel drive to Mission to Save the Helpless  (MITOSATH), an NGO involved in the fight against river blindness, to aid it in its bid to eradicate the disease in Taraba State. MITOSATH was the only local NGO fighting river blindness and distributing Mectizan, a curative drug for the disease. Subsequently, he established the TY Danjuma Foundation and through his organisation and MITOSATH, TY Danjuma claims to have supported approximately 12 million treatments in the country.

     

    About Onchocerciasis

    Onchocerciasis is a parasitic disease caused by the worm onchocerca volvulus, a parasitic worm that lives up to 14 years in the human body. Each adult female produces millions of microfilariae that migrate through the body and give rise to various manifestations. The disease is transmitted by the bites of black fly, Simulium damnosum ssp  (kpu kpu in Igbo), according to ProfessorvRich Enujioke Umeh, Professor of Ophthalmology, University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN). The breeding sites are the banks of fast flowing rivers because the larva requires a lot of oxygen to mature. Consequently, people who live and work in or near such rivers get bitten often and therefore suffer the worst manifestation of the disease that is, blindness. Thus the disease is commonly known as River Blindness,  explained Professor Umeh.

    Onchocerciasis is responsible for an estimated annual burden of 388,576 disability adjusted life years (DALYs), 60 per cent of which is accounted for by Onchocercal Skin Diseases (OSD). Onchocerciasis is a disease of considerable socio-economic and public health importance. It has been implicated in cases of musculo-skeletal pain, epilepsy, inguinal hernias, secondary amenorrhea, spontaneous abortion, lactation difficulties, infertility and sterility. About 99 per cent of Onchocerciasis infected persons live in remote rural communities of Africa where about 75 million people are at risk of infection.

    The others live in Central and South America and Yemen in the Arabian Peninsula. The high transmission in Nigeria has been attributed to several factors, including misconceptions of the disease by several cultural groups which had led to the neglect of personal protection against the disease vector and non- compliance of infected individuals to treatment regime. For instance, investigations on the traditional beliefs of Yoruba women in Southwest Nigeria and Igbo women in South East Nigeria revealed that traditional societies living in endemic regions usually hold Onchocerciasis responsible for many reproductive problems,  according to Dr. Okoye, Ikem Chris of the Parasitology and Biomedical Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State.

    According to Okoye, the vast spread of the disease constitutes a serious impediment to effective control. The disease control is most effective using chemotherapeutic approach and the present drug of choice is mectizan (ivermectin). This strategy is, however, constrained by lack of community support resulting from the inability of control experts to understand local conceptions, priorities and preferences, especially their beliefs on the causes and effects of the disease and their attitude to health-care seeking behaviours, he said.

    Women and infants are known to have higher susceptibility and hence greater morbidity rate to tropical diseases than males. They are known to have higher episodes of illness and more hospital visits even outside gynecological and obstetric purposes.

    In traditional African societies, women are very strategic in the health outcomes and well being of the family. Despite their low level of knowledge about healthcare and poor financial resources, women determine and offer the first-line (home-made or domestic) treatment to sick members of their households, especially infants and children.

    According to studies conducted by Okoye about the perception of the disease by Hausa women of the Hawal River Valley and its adjoining communities lying within the southern border of Borno and northern part of Adamawa states, an area well known for serious ocular and socio-economic tolls of Onchocerciasis.

    Findings revealed that many of the women attributed many reproductive disorders to Onchocerciasis. Three principal morbidity indicators attributable to Onchocerciasis were nodules, leopard skin and rashes. Men have special preference for women with palpable nodules of the lower extremities. It is believed that tingling the nodules improved libido and sexual excitement. A man with a head nodule (mugu) is believed to be wicked, quick- tempered and undesirable as an in-law. “I will not give my daughter in marriage to a mugu, even if he has plugged out (excised) the nodule,” said a 50-year-old female farmer.

    Leopard skin was viewed as a familiar trait that occurred in some women at the onset of menopause. An unmarried lady who develops the condition is therefore viewed with suspicion. “You see that girl with leopard skin, suitors would think she can no longer bear children.  When leopard skin appears clearly on the chin, it shows that the lady is gradually approaching cessation of her monthly blood flow (menopause),” responded a 37- year-old carpenter.

    Craw-craw (papular rashes) is viewed merely as cosmetic blemishes but the condition is also believed to be contagious. Potential suitors therefore resent spinsters with this condition. “Except a girl was cured of craw-craw, prospective suitors and family members are discouraged from seeking her hand in marriage,” was the response from a 55-year-old school teacher. Furthermore, a 60-year-old male farmer had the perception that “Craw-craw was contagious and no girl having craw-craw was given out in marriage to avoid embarrassment.”

    Findings revealed that deep-rooted ignorance and incorrect beliefs about the causes and effects of a disease may lead to the neglect of personal protection measures thus allowing intensification of the disease morbidity in the affected areas. They also throw more insight into local disease convictions, which are known to have direct effect on health and illness behaviour. These deep-rooted convictions have great effects on the levels of compliance to and therefore success of any Onchocerciasis control regime. It is also the basis on which infected individuals seek particular kinds of remedies in preference to other forms when they suffer from Onchocerciasis-induced symptoms. The issues raised by the women should be subjected to further biomedical investigations, he suggested.

     

    Consequences of the disease

    Blindness and impaired vision are the most dangerous disabilities associated with the disease and are seen more among endemic communities living around the foci of transmission. Onchocercal blindness is more common in the savanna bio-climatic zone than in the rain forest zone and it is often associated with changes in the skin. Itching and scratching are the most important early manifestations of onchocercal dermatitis and may affect any part of the body. Alteration in skin pigmentation also occurs early in the disease and may affect any part of the body.

    Papular rash may develop at any time on any part of the body and is usually associated with severe itching, which leads to scratching, bleeding and ulceration with secondary infection. Sowda is a severe form of onchocercal dermatitis first described in Yemen. Those affected have intensely itchy, dark and thickened skin, with papular rash and enlarged, soft, non-tender, regional lymph nodes. Sowda is usually localised and typically involves one leg but more generalised form may involve both legs and any part of the body. Other forms of onchocercal dermatitis are known as lizard skin and leopard skin. In long-standing onchocercal dermatitis, the skin generally becomes atrophic, fragile, wrinkled and inelastic and areas of it, often the shins, develop the classical spotting de-pigmentation of leopard skin.

    Presence of palpable nodules is another evidence of Onchocerciasis in a person. Nodules tend to be more numerous and widely distributed in the rainforest than in the savanna but numbers of microfilariae in the skin are higher in the savanna. The classical method of determining the prevalence and intensity of Onchocerciasis is by the demonstration and counting of microfilariae in biopsies obtained by skin snipping. Although very specific, this technique is inadequate for detecting early, light infections and is becoming increasingly unacceptable to the populations investigated due to different reasons, one of which is the awareness of the potential risk of secondary infections, especially with HIV.

     

    A stitch in time

    Efforts to control river blindness in sub-Saharan Africa started several decades ago. In the 1950s and 1960s, attempts were made to control the disease on a small scale in the hardest-hit areas of Volta River basin, Benin, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, Mali, Niger, Togo, Burkina Faso) but such uncoordinated national control efforts did not produce any lasting results because of the ability of the black fly that transmits the disease to cover long distances and cross borders. Re-invasion was a very common occurrence and this made uncoordinated national control efforts ineffective.

    At an international conference in Tunisia in 1968, participants concluded that the disease could be controlled if addressed on a sufficiently large scale. Scientists from WHO and other experts contributed to the preparation of a regional control plan. Several donors expressed interest. Thus a partnership was born, and the Onchocerciasis Control Programme (OCP) was formally launched in 1974 to eliminate the disease as a public health problem and mitigate the negative impact on the social and economic development of affected areas.

    The OCP initially included seven countries, WHO, the World Bank, the UN Development Programme and the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation. Participation eventually increased to 11 countries in West Africa with more than 25 donors, some non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and numerous rural community groups.

    The sustained commitment of bilateral and multilateral donors, NGDOs, national governments and other partners involved in the OCP made this programme a major and impressive public health success story that continues till today. Transmission of the disease has been virtually halted in almost all the targeted West African countries, 600,000 cases of blindness were prevented, and more than 20 million children born in the OCP area are now free from the risk of contracting river blindness. About 25 million hectares of arable land is safe for re-settlement.

    It was indeed this success and the same commitment and unwavering support of the donors and NGDOs and other partners that led to the creation of the African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) in 1995 to control river blindness in the non OCP endemic countries in Africa.

    The historic pledge by Merck to donate Mectizan “to anyone who needed it, for as long as it was needed” marked the start of the world’s longest ongoing medical donation programme, and one of the largest public-private partnerships ever created. APOC is a unique global partnership which brings together 19 participating countries with the active involvement of the Ministries of Health and their affected communities, several international and local NGOs, the scientific community, the private sector (Merck & Co., Inc.), several multilateral and bilateral donors, UN agencies and more than 120,000 rural African communities, according to Dr Grace Fobi, Community Ownership and Partnership Officer at APOC.

     

    How a youth corps member started the fight in Nigeria

    The dark hole of blindness was discovered in the “village of the blind” on Bali- Mambilla road Nigeria, by Francisca Olamiju, a youth corps member in 1995. Olamiju felt it was preventable blindness, and that something can be done to stem its tide, thus she established Mission to Save the Helpless (MITOSATH) the first national non-governmental development organisation to combat Onchocerciasis in Taraba State.

    At the time of the discovery, majority of the afflicted were men and women in their prime age, the breadwinners of homes and the community, who became dependent on their children for mobility, the result of which was an endangered set communities with extreme poverty, mental and physical growth retardation, and almost non-existent academic activity.

    With the timely seed effort in one LGA through Ivermectin Distribution Program (IDP) and an initial treatment record of 22,622 in 1996, MITOSATH has grown to support the three states of Taraba, Ondo and Lagos in mapping, baseline surveys, control and elimination of a cluster of diseases referred to as Neglected Tropical Diseases: Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis (LF), Schistosomiasis, Soil Transmitted Helminthes (STH), and Trachoma in 54 Local Government Areas. Working with her government partners and with progressive data showing consistent intervention, a cumulative treatment figure of over 9.6million with 24million tablets of Mectizan has been reached against Onchocerciasis as at 2010.

    The dividends of Olamiju’s foresight is continually felt across the disease infested areas in the country. And the case of 38-year-old Zaki Baushe is instructive to note. In 2006, Baushe, a tailor in Akwanga Local Government Area, Nasarawa State, stood in danger of losing his sight and livelihood entirely. Baushe noticed that his vision was fading and it became difficult for him to perform the simplest tasks. As his blindness only worsened over time, Baushe was forced to abandon his old treadle sewing machine and agonised helplessly, over the creeping blindness that threatened to rob him of his livelihood and lifeline to his entire family.

    However, Dr. Emmanuel Miri, resident technical adviser for the Carter Center’s health programmes in Nigeria, discovered Baushe’s case during a routine visit to administer medicines in Kambre. Listening to his symptoms, it was clear to Dr. Miri that Baushe was suffering from river blindness, also known as Onchocerciasis. Baushe was surprised to learn that his affliction was caused by the repeated bites of black flies that swarmed near his village. Through their bites, some of these flies had deposited larvae into his body, which grew into parasitic worms. However, it was the offspring of these worms, called microfilariae, that were the principal cause of his troubles. They swarmed under his skin, causing intense itching and skin discoloration, and had migrated into his eyes, causing lesions that had damaged his sight.