State, Gujarat top blindness control........Vineeta Pandey 

TN, Andhra, K'taka, Kerala, Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab, UP and MP are next in 
line 

NEW DELHI: As far as the national programme for control of blindness (NPCB) is 
concerned, Maharashtra and Gujarat's vision is near-20/20. 

The states have emerged the best performers in NPCB parameters cataract surgery 
and school eye screening. The third parameter is collection of donated eyes.

Tamil Nadu, Andhra, Karnataka, Kerala, Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab, Uttar 
Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh are next in line, while Bihar, Jharkhand, Jammu and 
Kashmir, Assam and other northeastern states are among the worst performers, 
according to the health ministry.

Maharashtra conducted 6,14,667 cataract surgeries and Gujarat 6,44,389, much 
above the  target of 5,50,000 for 2007-08. Gujarat screened 51,88,638 
schoolchildren and found 82,989 of them had refractive errors and distributed 
75,862 free spectacles.
In Maharashtra, 31,58,380 schoolchildren were screened, of which 1,18,588 had 
refractive errors and 61,596 were given free spectacles.

Gujarat topped in eye donation as well, at 7,372, followed by Tamil Nadu 
(6,635), Maharashtra (4,698) and Andhra (3,660). 

In view of Maharashtra's high performance, the health ministry has decided to 
help the state upgrade one of its medical colleges as regional institute of 
ophthalmology in the 11th five-year plan.

Considering the high number of schoolchildren detected with refractive errors, 
the ministry has also decided to focus on childhood blindness in the 11th plan. 
Accordingly, special eye check-up camps will be conducted in all schools.

"Childhood blindness will be the priority for the government now. It has been 
found that 7% of schoolchildren in India have refractive errors. So far, we 
were conducting check-ups for middle- and higher-secondary students, but now, 
primary classes will also be included. 

"All schoolchildren will be tested for squint and other eye problems, including 
weak eyesight and poor children will be given free spectacles," R Jose, 
additional director general of NPCB, said. 

The government is planning to strengthen eye banks and engage "eye donation 
counsellors" to motivate the kin of the dead to donate eyes. "There has been a 
gradual increase in eye donation. In 2006-07, 30,000 eyes were donated, in 
07-08 38,000 and this year, the number has gone up to 42,000. The counsellors 
will motivate terminally-ill patients and their family members to donate eyes," 
Jose said. 

The government will also provide financial support to NGOs to strengthen the 
existing infrastructure for eye care. 


URL: http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1202864
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

Reply via email to