| Why the World Needs CSFII
Goal 1 -- Controlling and Eliminating the Major Causes
of Avoidable Blindness
Cataract
The world's rapidly aging population will make cataract blindness
a more formidable foe than ever. Increased surgical capacity
and trained personnel are urgently needed to prevent millions
from losing their sight to cataract.
The SightFirst Action Plan:
- To counter the expected crush of cataract cases in the
next 15 years, SightFirst will fund at least two million
cataract surgeries where the need is greatest, continue
to support Lions' large-scale surgical campaigns and increase
the number of surgeries performed at Lions-affiliated eye
centers.
- It will also increase the number of ophthalmologists trained
at six Lions-affiliated training institutions and train
at least 10,000 other eye care workers.
Trachoma and River Blindness
Trachoma and river blindness (technically named Onchocerciasis)
are being successfully challenged as leading causes of blindness
but remain a significant problem.
River blindness is a painful parasitic disease that affects
100 million people in equatorial Africa and Latin America
and has blinded millions.
Trachoma is a bacterial infection linked to poverty, poor
water supplies and poor sanitation. It too, has blinded millions
and disproportionately affects children and young mothers.
Both can be treated with annual doses of antibiotic medicine
and the blinding effects of trachoma can be reversed by trichiasis
surgery. Clean water and improved sanitation could eliminate
trachoma entirely.
The SightFirst Action Plan - River Blindness:
- Lions are the leading non-governmental organization (NGO)
in the fight against river blindness and in Latin America
SightFirst will play a leading role in fully eliminating
the disease by 2010 through the Lions-Carter Center SightFirst
Initiative. Lions will also play a major role in ensuring
that a similar goal is met in Africa by 2020.
- In the process, SightFirst will provide 12-15 million
people with yearly treatments with the antibiotic Mectizan
(manufactured and donated by Merck & Co.) through 2010.
The SightFirst Action Plan - Trachoma:
SightFirst will expand trachoma control activities from five
countries to 15 by 2010, increasing the population served
from two million annually to 30-40 million. Lions' expected
contributions to trachoma control through 2020 will equal
about 1/4 to 1/3 of the overall funding needed to control
the disease, placing Lions at the lead of the international
treatment effort.
- Working with governments and NGOs, SightFirst aims to
eliminate trachoma by 2020 as a blinding eye disease in
the 10 countries that have 80 percent of the disease and
support projects in 15 lesser-affected countries where pockets
of the disease still exist.
- In the next five years Sight First will increase the number
of surgeries at Lions' large-scale trichiasis surgery campaigns
from 6,000 to 25- to 40,000 annually
Glaucoma and Diabetic Retinopathy Worldwide
The rapidly aging world population - there will be more than
2 billion people over the age of 45 by 2020 - also puts more
millions at risk from diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma and other
age-related causes of blindness.
The SightFirst Action Plan:
- SightFirst will strengthen treatment services for age-related
blindness by developing 200 clinics where they are most
needed.
Goal 1 | Goal 2 |
Goal 3
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