He has restored eyesight to more than 100,000 people, perhaps more than any 
doctor in history, and still his patients come. They stagger and grope their 
way to him along mountain trails from remote villages, hoping to go under his 
scalpel and see loved ones again.

A day after he operates to remove cataracts, he pulls off the bandages - and, 
lo! They can see clearly. At first tentatively, then jubilantly, they gaze 
about. A few hours later, they walk home, radiating an ineffable bliss.

Dr. Sanduk Ruit, a Nepali ophthalmologist, may be the world champion in the war 
on blindness. Some 39 million people worldwide are blind - about half because 
of cataracts - and another 246 million have impaired vision, according to the 
World Health Organization.

If you're a blind person in a poor country, then traditionally you have no 
hope. But Ruit has pioneered a simple cataract microsurgery technique that 
costs only $25 per patient and is virtually always successful. Indeed, his 
"Nepal method" is now taught in U.S. medical schools.

I'm on my annual win-a-trip journey, in which I take a university student with 
me on a trip to the developing world to cover underreported issues. The 
student, Austin Meyer of Stanford University, and I traveled to Hetauda in 
southern Nepal to watch Ruit perform his magic on 102 men and women.

One patient was Thuli Maya Thing, a woman of 50 who says she has struggled to 
look after her children since losing her sight to cataracts in the last few 
years. Because of her blindness and inability to work, the family sometimes 
goes hungry.

"I can't fetch firewood or water," Thuli Maya told me. "I can't cook food. I 
fall down many times. I've been burned by the fire."

So Thuli Maya was waiting outside the eye hospital that Ruit has established 
here, nervous but also eager with anticipation. "I will be able to see my 
children and husband again - that's what I look forward to most," she said.

She was led to the operating theater, and her eyes were injected with local 
anesthetic. After hoisting her left eye wide open with an eyelid speculum, Ruit 
peered through a microscope as he made a tiny incision in her eyeball and then 
tugged out the cataract - and placed it in my palm. It was hard and yellowish, 
perhaps a third of an inch in diameter, a tiny opaque disk that had devastated 
Thuli Maya's life.

Ruit inserted a tiny new lens into the eye and he was done. The process took 
just five minutes. Then he repeated the process for Thuli Maya's right eye, 
confident that she would see again.

"Here, the returns are so clear," Ruit said as he bandaged her eye. "It's like 
no other medical intervention."

In the United States, cataract surgery is typically performed with complex 
machines. But these are unaffordable in poor countries, so Ruit built on the 
work of others (including the Aravind Eye Care System in India, a superb 
institution that performed 280,000 cataract surgeries last year) to pioneer and 
refine small-incision microsurgery to remove cataracts without sutures.

At first, skeptics denounced or mocked his innovations. But then the American 
Journal of Ophthalmology published a study of a randomized trial finding that 
Ruit's technique had exactly the same outcome (98 percent success at a 
six-month follow-up) as the Western machines. One difference was that Ruit's 
method was much faster and cheaper.

"The results are fantastic," said Dr. Geoffrey Tabin, an eye specialist at the 
University of Utah's Moran Eye Center. Tabin learned the technique from Ruit 
and was in Hetauda as well, removing cataracts beside Ruit, and he says the 
results in rural Nepal using this technique are as good as those of his 
patients in Salt Lake City paying for first-class care and benefiting from 
almost $1 million in the latest medical equipment.

Tabin said that when machines can't be used for cataract surgery in the United 
States (if, for example, the cataract is too large), the standard American 
manual surgical technique is inferior to Ruit's.

Tabin, a mountain climber whose interest in Nepal was sparked by summiting 
Mount Everest, leads the Himalayan Cataract Project, a U.S. charity that 
supports Ruit's work and takes its techniques to other countries, like Ethiopia 
and Ghana. The battle against global blindness is now a joint Ruit/Tabin 
project, and they optimistically named their website CureBlindness.org.

"Dr. Ruit was the first doctor to put lenses in poor persons in the developing 
world," Tabin said. "Nobody has restored sight to as many people."

By Ruit's count, which others find credible, he has conducted 120,000 cataract 
surgeries, mostly on a single eye of a patient. But Ruit developed not just a 
surgical technique but an entire eye care system. He founded the Tilganga 
Institute of Ophthalmology, which includes hospitals, outreach clinics and 
training programs and an eye bank, using fees from better-off patients to 
support impoverished ones like Thuli Maya. Tilganga conducts eye surgery on 
30,000 patients annually - half for a fee, half gratis.

Tilganga also manufactures 450,000 tiny lenses a year for use in cataract 
surgery, keeping costs to $3 a lens compared with $200 in the West. The quality 
seems excellent, and they are exported to 50 countries, some in Europe. And for 
those who lose an eye, Tilganga makes realistic-looking prosthetics that cost 
$3, compared with $150 for an imported false eye.

This system impresses experts around the world. Dr. David F. Chang, a past 
president of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery, describes 
Ruit as "one of the most important ophthalmologists in the world."

Ruit, 61, who grew up in a remote part of northeastern Nepal and studied 
medicine in India, is now taking his model to other low-income countries.

"If we can do this in Nepal, it can be done anywhere in the world," he said.

One reason to focus on vision on a win-a-trip journey: Blindness is both 
extremely debilitating and often easy to overcome or prevent. Vitamin A 
capsules cost 2 cents each and can prevent 250,000 or more cases of child 
blindness each year (half of those children die within a year of going blind). 
Blinding trachoma can be prevented with improved hygiene and donated 
antibiotics. River blindness is on its way out in part because of the heroic 
work of Jimmy Carter and medicine donated by Merck. And cataracts - we'll, 
let's pick up with Thuli Maya.

A day after the surgery, she and the 101 other patients were ready to have 
their bandages removed. Ruit carefully pulled off Thuli Maya's eye patches, and 
she blinked a couple of times - and took in her surroundings for the first time 
in years. She beamed as her eyesight was tested; it came out 20/20.

"I used to get around by crawling," Thuli Maya said through her smiles, "and 
now I can get up and walk."

Readers often tell me of their doubts about humanitarian aid, and it's true 
that helping people is always harder than it looks. But sometimes it's almost 
miraculous: A $25 surgery, say $50 for both eyes, to restore a person's sight. 
"This is such high impact, for so little money," Ruit said as he watched his 
patients adjusting to sight again.

Meanwhile, Thuli Maya was dancing.
© 2015, The New York Times News Service


With regards

Anshul Kapoor
Cell- 9958890358.

Someone asked me how are you?
I replied- Life is hell, rest is fine…



Disclaimer: This communication is confidential and privileged and is directed 
to and for the use of the addressee only. The recipient, if not the addressee, 
should not use this message if erroneously received as access and use of this 
e-mail in any manner by anyone other than the addressee is unauthorized. The 
recipient acknowledges that GAIL (India) Limited may be unable to exercise 
control or ensure or guarantee the integrity of the text of this email message 
and the text is not warranted as to completeness and accuracy. Though GAIL 
(India) Limited has taken reasonable precautions to ensure no viruses are 
present in this e-mail, however, it cannot accept responsibility for any loss 
or damage arising from the use of this email or attachments.



Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of 
mobile phones / Tabs on:
http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

To unsubscribe send a message to
[email protected]
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Disclaimer:
1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the 
person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity;

2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent 
through this mailing list..

Reply via email to