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Operation Eyesight is excited to announce our funding partnership with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). With support from USAID’s Child Blindness Program, we will provide vision screening and treatment for 80,000 children in Kenya.

Our team in Kenya will work closely with the local Ministries of Health and Education, targeting 80,000 students and 3,000 teachers in three sub-counties of Uasin Gishu County over a two-year period. Twenty teachers will be trained to use Peek Vision, a smartphone-based technology used to identify students with eyesight problems. Eye screenings will be conducted in 200 schools. Students in need of eye care will be referred to a mobile ophthalmic triage team or the nearest eye health facility, and transportation will be provided as needed.

Essilor East Africa will be supplying Operation Eyesight with the prescription eyeglasses needed to ensure that children (and teachers) receive the vision correction they require. Children requiring specialized care, such as cataract surgery, will receive treatment at one of our partner hospitals. Our continuum of care approach will ensure that students receive the same level of quality care, regardless of their gender, treatment location or ability to pay. Referral information and appointment reminders will be sent to the students’ parents through automated text messaging.

“By investing in children’s eye health to treat diseases, correct refractive error and restore sight, we can transform lives, families and communities,” says Alice Mwangi, Country Manager for Kenya. “We know that women and girls are more likely to suffer from vision impairment and less likely than men and boys to receive treatment and care. Through this project, many of the barriers faced by girls such as cost and lack of transportation are addressed. We will educate teachers, parents, grandparents and health workers on the additional barriers faced by girls so they understand and can play a role in addressing these challenges.”

This program is the culmination of strategic partnerships and leverages expertise and resources from other organizations to promote the integration of eye health into Kenya’s primary systems. By engaging the Ministries of Health and Education during all phases, we can ensure ongoing support and sustainability of the program. Ultimately, our goal is to integrate these school screenings and referral mechanisms within the entire county school system and have the local ministries take ownership of it.

From 2016 to 2018, we conducted a similar school screening program in the neighboring Trans Nzoia County. Our evaluation showed that an integrated system of care significantly improved the overall hospital attendance rate among children referred from Peek Vision compared with the standard system. Our program in Uasin Gishu County builds on the lessons learned in the Trans Nzoia initiative and aims to not only provide quality eye health services to school children but to further refine the model for scaling up in Kenya.

As an international development organization, we’re working to address the root causes of avoidable blindness and foster good health and well-being overall. That is why we’re also happy to share that Eco-Soap Bank will be providing 100,000 bars of soap for children and teachers of the program, for use at school and at home. Proper hand and face washing with soap and clean water can help prevent the spread of COVID-19 as well as blinding trachoma and other disease.

Deborah (left) received a pair of prescription eyeglasses through our previous program. Here she shares a happy moment with her younger sister.

About USAID’s Child Blindness Program

With an emphasis on quality and innovation, USAID’s Child Blindness Program prevents and treats blindness, restores sight and provides eyeglasses to thousands of people in the poorest communities of the world each year. The program’s investments and actions are strategically focused around two main goals: 1) To increase the number of children provided with quality vision-saving eye care services; and 2) To advance the global knowledge base on best practices and innovative approaches for pediatric eye care programs. Since 1991, USAID’s Child Blindness Program has provided eye care to over seven million children worldwide.

Facts on Child Blindness

Facts retrieved on February 23, 2021 from: https://www.usaid.gov/childblindness

This announcement is made possible by the generous support of the American people through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). The contents are the responsibility of Operation Eyesight Canada and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government.

Heeralal, 45, was a resident of a village near the Community Heath Centre (CHC) Niwas in Singrauli district in India. Passionate about health care, he joined the government as a multipurpose health worker (MPW) to serve people in remote and underserved areas.

In 2010, Heeralal became a para medical ophthalmic assistant (PMOA) after the Government of Madhya Pradesh called for MPWs to undergo PMOA training. He conducted regular eye exams at CHC Niwas but was disheartened by having only two or three patients a day. He took part in school screenings and cataract camps as awareness grew.

In 2022, Heeralal saw a turning point when we launched our Integrated People-Centred Eye Care project in Singrauli. CHCs were upgraded to vision centres, equipped with slit lamps and essential ophthalmic tools. PMOAs received refresher training for comprehensive eye examinations to build eye care capacity. A series of targeted interventions rolled out. We trained community health officers, accredited social health activists (ASHAs) and community health volunteers (CHVs). Screening camps were organized with a mobile vision van to boost awareness. With support from ASHAs and CHVs, Heeralal soon saw 12 to 15 patients daily.

Today, Heeralal feels more inspired than ever by the transformation in rural healthcare. His motivation grows with every person whose sight is restored.

Did you know? Integrating eye care into universal health care is one of the five recommendations of the World Health Organization 2019 World Report on Vision.

Learn more about our work in India here.

Learn why we're working to integrate eye health care into primary health care here.

Twelve-year-old Premi, in Rajasthan, India, loves reading and going to school, but in recent years, her enthusiasm for learning came under threat when her eyesight started to fade, making it difficult for her to read the blackboard and keep up with her studies.

Premi is one of three children. Her parents and older brother work as day labourers on nearby farms to support the family. Despite their efforts, money is often tight, and a visit to the optometrist would be a stretch for them. Fortunately for Premi, her school was visited by one of our eye screening teams as part of our Vision-centre Based Community Eye Health Project with our partner in the area, the Alakh Mayan Mandir Eye Hospital. Premi was quickly diagnosed with refractive error and received a pair of prescription eyeglasses, free of charge.

The whole family is grateful that this bright young girl can continue her studies, with hope for a brighter future.

Our approach to eye health ensures entire communities – including schoolkids like Premi – get screened for eye conditions and can access treatment at low or no cost. By offering multiple screening opportunities at schools, vision centres, screening camps and right on people’s doorsteps, we make sure nobody falls between the cracks.

Our unique “recipe” for community eye health

Our approach starts at the planning level – working with government and community partners to select a location with a high prevalence of vision loss and low socio-economic status – and a partner hospital with a compatible mission and vision.

Next, we collaborate with partners on an action plan, define the project area and decide on locations for vision centres. Once established, the vision centres act as links between communities and hospitals, providing comprehensive eye exams, dispensing glasses and making referrals to our partner hospital for surgeries.

Then, the training of community health workers begins. These frontline workers, mostly women, learn how to conduct visual acuity tests, identify various eye conditions, make referrals and provide eye health education. For many of our beneficiaries, the relationship with our programs begins and ends with the community health worker – who might visit the same household many times, offering kindness, compassion and counselling to nervous patients, as well as their eye health expertise.

Community health workers like Faizunnahar in Bangladesh, left, are at the heart of our model. Faizunnahar spends her days visiting patients at their homes, counselling and educating them about eye conditions and treatment. Throughout the project, these dedicated health workers develop strong ties within the communities they serve.

After their training, the community health workers fan out to our various communities of work, doing a baseline door-to-door survey and referring patients to the vision centres and partner hospitals for further diagnosis and treatment.

As we continue our work in the area, our teams organize various screening camps and school screenings to give everyone multiple opportunities to have their eyes checked. Community health workers also continue their door-to-door work, checking in on patients, providing eye health education and troubleshooting any problems patients might face in getting treatment. Teams crunch numbers to monitor progress and evaluate each project, later bringing in external agencies to audit the work.

Schoolchildren perform in a play about eye health at an Avoidable Blindness-Free declaration event for the Bonsuoko Community-Based Health Planning Zone in Ghana in June, 2025.

When the community health volunteers have done their final survey to make sure there are no backlog cases, villages and communities are declared as Avoidable Blindness-Free through public celebrations. At this point, the vision centres have become self-sustaining, so they can continue to deliver quality eye care services beyond the project’s duration.

Providing more than just eye care

The community health workers we employ for our door-to-door surveys can offer much more than just eye health expertise. Many have received additional training in primary health care and can provide advice and referrals for things like immunizations, vitamins, and maternal and newborn health care.

Shakuntala, a community health worker in India, conducts an eye health screening during a door-to-door survey. Thanks to her background in maternal and newborn health, she can make referrals for a variety of health issues while visiting patients at their homes.

Shakuntala, an Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA) with the Government of India, spent eight years providing advice to expectant mothers, and offering newborn care support, before she received additional training in primary eye care. With her experience, she can continue to offer referrals and education to mothers while she does her eye health screenings.

In 2024 alone, our community health workers linked more than 50,000 children aged five and under with crucial vitamin A injections, which reduces the severity of childhood illness and increases survival rates, while also helping them develop healthy vision. Also in 2024, we referred more than 16,000 expectant mothers and 12,000 nursing mothers with health facilities for check-ups.  

Moreover, a community health workers frequent visits to a household can help them monitor a patient’s progress not only with an eye condition but with other health problems as well.

Take Bulal in Nepal, for example, a 97-year-old man who has cataracts as well as diabetes. When Meena, an Operation Eyesight-trained community health worker, met Bulal during a door-to-door survey in 2021, she realized that he would need additional support to get the treatment he needed for his low vision. While he had been previously diagnosed with cataracts, the doctor told Bulal that his unstable blood sugar levels – and his high blood pressure – made cataract surgery too risky. Bulal thought he would live out his final days in darkness.

Bulal (centre) poses with his family and Meena, the dedicated community health worker (far right) who helped him stabilize his health prior to cataract surgery.

But when Meena heard his story, she set a plan in motion. Over the next few months, with Meena’s support and guidance, Bulal stabilized his sugar levels and brought down his blood pressure so he could safely undergo surgery. His family was grateful to see Bulal restored to his former dignity and independence once he could see clearly again.

From patient to ambassador – spreading the word about eye health

Ntiiti, a mother of five from a remote village in Kenya’s Kajiado County, started losing her vision in 2020. She didn’t know why she couldn’t see clearly and wondered if she was the victim of a curse. Soon, her vision was so poor that she could no longer perform essential day-to-day tasks like making meals, taking care of her children and looking after the family’s cattle.

Help arrived unexpectedly when a community health promoter, whom we’d trained in primary eye care, visited her home while conducting door-to-door screenings. He identified cataracts and sent her to a nearby eye screening camp for a formal diagnosis. At the camp, an ophthalmologist confirmed Ntiiti had bilateral cataracts and referred her for surgery. Ntiiti had never been to a hospital or clinic before, because of the distance to these facilities from her village, but our team helped arrange transportation so that she could get the treatment she needed. Thanks to our generous donors, she received surgeries on both eyes, free of charge.

Amazed by the difference the surgeries made to her life, Ntiiti told everyone in her community who complained of vision or eye problems about her miraculous recovery. Soon, she had her first recruit – a widowed mother of six who was living in total blindness. Ntiiti connected her to the community health promoter and even accompanied her to the hospital for her surgery.

We have many similar stories of patients like Ntiiti who become ambassadors for our programs. It speaks to the strength of our approach – by taking the time to build relationships in the community, patients with success stories become empowered to spread the word about the importance of getting treated for blindness and vision loss.

Ntiiti leads a friend with vision impairment to a community surgical camp in Kajiado County, Kenya. After receiving cataract surgery on both eyes, Ntiiti became an ambassador for eye health in her village, encouraging other people to seek eye care and guiding them through the treatment process.

To create the biggest impact, we start at the community level. By training and empowering local health workers, we can help create lasting connections that bring eye care directly to people’s doorsteps. These trusted workers are the heart of our model – identifying problems early, guiding patients through treatment and spreading awareness that can transform entire villages.

With your support, we can train more health workers, open more vision centres and ensure that no one is left behind. Donate today to help us build a future where avoidable vision loss is eliminated for good.

In the hills of Meghalaya’s Ri-Bhoi District, Robiroy, a young community health worker from Nongpoh Vision Centre, was assigned to serve 47 villages with a population of more than 16,000.

Initially, he encountered skepticism from the community, as people feared medical interventions or had misconceptions. For many, fading vision was simply part of growing old.

To overcome these barriers, Robiroy put aside his medical charts and stepped into courtyards, looking to connect with people with warmth and empathy. Over cups of tea, he listened, shared stories, and spoke of restored sight as a path to dignity and independence.

Robiroy poses with patients who have just received cataract surgery on the return journey from the hospital. Photo: Emmanuel Benia Tanti / Program Manager, India

Small victories soon blossomed. An elder who had received eye care could weave again. A farmer saw his fields clearly. Success stories spread across villages. Soon, Nongpoh Vision Centre saw patients surge, and 520 seniors received cataract surgeries. Families began prioritizing eye care across generations.

Currently, five of Robiroy’s 47 villages will soon be declared Avoidable Blindness-Free. He is not just restoring vision – he is sparking an eye care movement!

With files from Emmanuel Benia Tanti, Program Manager, India.

Did you know? Donations to Operation Eyesight help us train community health workers like Robiroy to deliver primary eye care in remote, rural and underserved communities. Donate today.

Every day, 10-year-old Benjamin in Kenya proudly leads his family’s goats out to graze, a chore that once seemed unthinkable, because from a young age, Benjamin was blind.

Benjamin lives with his parents and six siblings in the village of Olookitareti in Kajiado County. The family struggles financially; Benjamin’s father Joshua has a chronic illness, while his mother, who lives with a disability, does her best to manage their livestock herds while also caring for the children.

Benjamin can help around the house now by taking out the family's goats to graze. His sight-restoring sight was made possible by the generosity of donors like you,

In 2023, a local disability advocacy group referred Benjamin to a special needs boarding school, where he learned to read braille. His parents were grateful that he would receive an education, but they still worried about his future.

The following year, a community health worker identified cataracts in Joshua’s eyes during a door-to-door screening and referred him to our surgical camp. He took Benjamin along, hoping for a diagnosis for the child as well.

Watch Benjamin play soccer in our video about his life-transforming eye surgery!

At the camp, Benjamin was also diagnosed with cataracts and referred to our pediatric cataract camp happening at another facility. But on the day of the camp, he didn’t show up. The outreach team made calls to the family to track him down, but their calls went unanswered. Finally, our community health promoter located Benjamin at his school. She later discovered that the family had lost their phone.

Recognizing the urgency of Benjamin’s condition, our outreach team contacted the family’s close friend, Pastor Titus, who accompanied Benjamin to the surgical camp with the family’s blessing.

Benjamin (centre, collared shirt) poses with his family in front of their home. Through the four-year Vision Impact Project, led by Kenya's Ministry of Health and CBM, we have reached thousands of households in Kajiado County with quality eye health care.

Thanks to the support of our partners and donors like you, Benjamin successfully underwent surgery and had his vision restored. Joshua also underwent surgery and can now see clearly.

Now, Benjamin attends a regular primary school, confidently tackling Grade I. He reads and writes with ease and loves to join soccer games with the other children in the village.

His parents are grateful that Benjamin can now live up to his full potential.

Written with files from Patrick Wainaina Muthii.

This holiday season, consider giving the Gift of Sight to transform lives for more children like Benjamin!

For most of her life, Napolo, from Narok West Sub-county near the Kenya-Tanzania border, lived with constant eye pain. Now 78 years old, she first noticed discomfort in her 30s. Her eyes often felt irritated, as if filled with sand, and she experienced tearing and discharge that made it difficult to see. This attracted flies, but Napolo had no access to clean water to wash her face. 

Napolo wasn’t aware that she was suffering from trachoma, a bacterial infection of the eye and the leading cause of blindness in areas with shortages of water and crowded living conditions. The bacteria spreads easily through contact with eye discharge from infected people on hands and clothing, and also through direct transmission by flies. 

If left untreated, trachoma causes the eyelids to turn inward, making the eyelashes rub painfully against the surface of the eye. This causes permanent scarring of the cornea and irreversible vision loss.  

Without access to regular health care, Napolo turned to traditional remedies. Her family members would pluck out her eyelashes to help ease the pain, but the relief never lasted. The irritation always returned, and over time, Napolo’s vision became worse.  

In her Maa community, many people had similar symptoms, and plucking one's eyelashes out was considered normal. Health workers occasionally visited their community, but Napolo often missed them because she was always out looking after her animals, sometimes even crossing over the border to let the animals graze in Tanzania. She somehow managed despite her diminishing vision and increasing pain.  

One fateful day, an Operation Eyesight-trained Community Health Promoter visited Napolo’s home – and the visit changed everything. 

You see, for many years Operation Eyesight has been working to eliminate trachoma in communities like Napolo’s. Through the Kenya Trachoma Elimination Program, funded by Sightsavers International, Operation Eyesight and partners are working to eliminate trachoma in Narok West Sub-county and the entire country by 2028. With this support, and in collaboration with the Narok County Department of Health, we launched a door-to-door screening initiative to identify remaining cases of trachoma trichiasis – the painful late stage of the disease. We provided training and resources for local Community Health Promoters. They screen people in their communities and refer those in need of eye care to our nearest partner facility. 

During a community screening in November 2024, Napolo was identified and referred to Talek Health Centre, an outreach site that provides surgical treatment for trachoma patients. At the health centre, the ophthalmic team examined Napolo’s eyes and confirmed her diagnosis. 

Napolo agreed to undergo eyelid surgery to correct her inward-turned eyelids. The procedure was successful, and her recovery brought immense relief, preventing further damage to her eyes and preserving her remaining vision. 

Ophthalmologist in a surgical gown and mask preparing instruments and Napolo for the upcoming eye surgery.
An ophthalmologist prepares Napolo for the trachoma trichiasis surgery.

“I have longed for this comfort for decades. There is no more discomfort, and I can open my eyes freely,” Napolo said. “I thank Operation Eyesight and the doctors who assisted me, and I will definitely refer anyone in my community that has the same problem so that they can be assisted.”  

Napolo’s story shows how access to quality eye care can transform lives. 

Close-up image showing Napolo’s healing eyelids after trachoma surgery, with no signs of irritation or discomfort.
Napolo’s eyelids clean and healing after her successful trachoma trichiasis surgery.

Did you know? Trachoma is the leading cause of infectious blindness.   

Currently, 103 million people live in trachoma endemic areas and are at risk of trachoma blindness, and presently 1.9 million people are experiencing vision impairment or blindness due to the disease.1 It is found in 32 countries, in areas with shortages of clean water and crowded living conditions. Caused by the bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis, trachoma is spread by eye-seeking flies and personal contact. Children and women are at particular risk. 

Operation Eyesight follows the World Health Organization-endorsed SAFE strategy, which has proven effective in eliminating trachoma. The SAFE strategy is a comprehensive treatment and prevention program that includes Surgery to treat the late stage of the disease, Antibiotics to eliminate infection, Face washing and hygiene education, and Environmental change including wells and latrines.  

Join us in supporting programs that bring vital vision care to people like Napolo and also address the root causes of vision loss. Together, we can eliminate trachoma and ensure everyone has access to the eye care they deserve. Give the Gift of Sight today. Join us in supporting programs that bring vital vision care to people like Napolo and also address the root causes of vision loss. Together, we can eliminate trachoma and ensure everyone has access to the eye care they deserve. Give the Gift of Sight today.   

If you sprain an ankle or come down with a bad cough, your first stop is usually your family doctor. But when it comes to blurry vision, the path to care often looks very different. Around the world, eye health is still treated separately from primary health care, creating gaps that leave people without the vision help they need. Even in countries with universal health coverage, you might receive a complex eye surgery at no cost, yet pay out of pocket – or use private health insurance – for something as simple as a pair of eyeglasses.

At Operation Eyesight, we believe this needs to change. That’s why we’re working to strengthen areas of overlap between primary eye care and primary health care in our countries of operation. That means supporting the World Health Assembly’s integrated people-centred eye care (IPEC) resolution by working to integrate eye health into national health systems – and increasing access to free or subsidized eye health care.

It also means addressing the root causes of avoidable vision loss. In some regions in Africa, we bring fresh water and hygiene education to communities to help prevent infectious eye conditions. We also work to make sure our services offer more than just eye care, but can also link patients to other types of health care.

Why eye health can’t be treated in isolation

Health conditions rarely exist in silos – and vision loss is no exception. Diabetes, for example, increases the risk of eye conditions like cataracts. For 15-year-old Vanessa in Zambia, blurry vision was one of the first signs of the disease. When she started having problems reading the blackboard at school, a teacher sent her to our vision centre in her community of Matero for a checkup. From there, she received a referral to our partner hospital, where she learned that she not only had cataracts, but diabetes as well. Doctors helped her get her blood sugar levels under control, and then she got cataract surgery. Today, she is managing her diabetes and thriving in school, with dreams of becoming a doctor.

Vanessa in Zambia didn’t realize she had diabetes until after she’d visited our eye clinic. Health conditions like diabetes often overlap with vision issues.

Vision problems can also cause a downward mental health spiral. Benson, a farmer in Kenya, lost his ability to work due to poor vision. As a result, he became angry and depressed, then turned to alcohol and drugs to cope with his situation. Luckily, his family got him into a drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility, where a visiting doctor diagnosed him with cataracts. Benson underwent surgery on both eyes, provided free of charge thanks to the support of our donors, and can see clearly now. Buoyed by his miraculous recovery, Benson finished up his time at the rehabilitation facility and happily threw himself back into farming.

Integrating eye care into Canada’s health system

In Canada, where Operation Eyesight is based, navigating eye care can be confusing. While the Canada Health Act covers medically-necessary eye health services, routine vision care like eye exams and prescription glasses often isn’t part of the deal. That leaves provinces and territories to fill in the gaps, and the result is a patchwork system. For example, seniors in Ontario get routine eye exams covered once they hit 65, but in Newfoundland and Labrador, those same seniors might have to pay out-of-pocket. It’s inconsistent, and it’s especially tough on vulnerable populations.

There is some support through the Federal Non-Insured Health Benefits (NIHB) program, which covers eye exams and eyewear for eligible First Nations and Inuit individuals. But even that has its hurdles: remote communities, limited healthcare infrastructure and cultural differences that make accessing care more complicated than it should be.

A young student in Maskwacîs, Canada has his eyes screened in a school setting.

The passage of the National Strategy for Eye Care Act in 2024 was a major step forward in addressing these issues. As chair of the Canadian Eye Health Coalition, Operation Eyesight is helping shape a national framework that prioritizes equitable access to vision care. Our Global Director of International Programs, Kris Kelm, explains why it’s important that we have a seat at the table during the consultation period and beyond.

“We know that there will be many voices in this conversation with diverse interests, and we want to ensure there is representation from patients who have the least means and the least ability to access vision care,” he says. “The fact that we have over 60 years of experience working in this sector gives us a strong background to speak credibly to how we need to approach things in Canada, and our community partners can provide valuable insights to help shape eye care for all.”

He adds that Canada can learn from some of our countries of work, where eye health has been better integrated into the overall health systems and other public frameworks. As an example, he points to Ghana, where we work with the ministries of health and education to screen and treat students for eye conditions in the public school system. We have similar programs in Kenya and Zambia, too.

Another example is in India, where we are working with state governments to establish vision services in pre-existing government health centres. Building the capacity of vision care facilities within the country’s national health care system ensures that services reach the most underserved populations, as patients who are able to pay most typically seek care at for-profit facilities, rather than attending government services.

Community health workers: Integrating eye care at the community level

Shakuntala, in Madhya Pradesh, India, spends her days walking door to door through villages in her region, checking in on the health and well-being of families. She’s one of the million-strong network of Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), employed by the Indian government, who deliver primary health care at the community level.

Shakuntala in India goes door-to-door screening people with eye conditions. During her visits, she also consults with people about a variety of health issues.

Her work includes providing pregnancy advice, supporting newborn care, educating parents about vaccinations and vitamins for children, and making all kinds of referrals to local clinics and hospitals. In 2022, Shakuntala added another set of skills to her toolkit: conducting primary eye health screenings, thanks to training provided by our Operation Eyesight team, in partnership with the Government of Madhya Pradesh. Shakuntala learned to measure visual acuity using an eye chart. She also learned to identify the signs and symptoms of various eye conditions. Once she identifies a patient with a possible eye condition, she refers them to the base hospital for diagnosis and treatment. In the meantime, she continues to provide advice and referrals on nutrition, vaccinations, prenatal care and other health concerns.

Shakuntala is just one of the thousands of community health workers we work with across the globe. In all our countries of work, we partner with existing health systems to recruit community health workers, mostly women, to help us deliver our programs. The health workers develop strong ties within the communities, resulting in high acceptance and trust in our programming.

A woman holds up an eye chart. She is outdoors, and a boat and palm trees are visible in the background.
Mabel in Kormantse, Ghana, holds up a Tumbling E eye chart to patients during an eye health survey.

Mabel, a community health nurse in Ghana, was trained in primary eye care so that she could identify eye health issues in addition to her regular duties. She says that being able to screen people at their home allows her to reach many women and girls who probably wouldn’t have left the village to seek eye health care, due to household responsibilities.

Water and WASH for sight

Anyone who has had a case of pink eye knows that having red, inflamed and itchy eyes isn’t much fun. But in some parts of the world, an eye infection can be a much more serious problem. Trachoma is an infectious eye disease that leads to vision loss and blindness in millions of people across the globe. It spreads easily through contact with eye discharge from infected people on hands and clothing, and through flies. If left untreated, chronic infections turn the eyelid inwards, causing intense pain and scarring of the cornea, which can lead to irreversible blindness.

Trachoma is preventable, and clean water is key to curbing the spread. When communities have access to clean water, people can clean their hands, faces and clothing more often, which prevents it from spreading.

In countries like Zambia, we work with Water Affairs (the government department responsible for water) to drill, rehabilitate and repair boreholes near where people live, work and go to school, so that whole villages have access to clean water. We also provide training to local volunteers in these communities in WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) and borehole repair and maintenance to ensure the clean water continues to flow. In areas where trachoma is endemic, we also work with partners to distribute antibiotics, which both treats and prevents trachoma.

Our team of borehole-repair trainees fixes a hand pump in the village of Sendeleka, Zambia.

It's another way that we work to address one of the root causes of avoidable vision loss, but it also helps us tie into improved health outcomes overall. Accessible clean water helps prevent dozens of infectious diseases. It also improves quality of life for women and girls, who are often tasked with the job of fetching water, which can take up hours out of the day and prevent them from participating in school, work or other activities. Moreover, clean water means people can grow vegetable gardens, raise livestock and keep entire families, and communities, happier and healthier.

Tying it all together

When we invest in sight, we invest in education, productivity and dignity. To eliminate avoidable vision loss, vision care needs to be recognized as a public health priority and integrated into national health strategies. Operation Eyesight’s global experience – from rehabilitating boreholes in Zambia to collaborating with partners on new policies in Canada – demonstrates that integrating eye health into primary care, addressing environmental determinants like access to clean water, and empowering community health workers leads to sustainable, measurable outcomes. Policymakers have a critical role to play in building resilient health systems that ensure equitable access to vision care for all.

Read more about our approach to Hospital-Based Community Eye Health.

On the day I arrived in Garbatulla, Kenya to begin my work with Operation Eyesight, there was no electricity, so I couldn’t let my colleagues back in Nairobi know that I had made it. The next day, the network came back online, but the incident sums up one of the challenges of working in this area – the difficulty in connecting with people, including many of our community health promoters who live in villages without network coverage.

A woman wearing a bright orange dress and head wrap poses for the camera.
Hellen, in Garbatulla, Kenya is recovering well after cataract surgery.

Many people here in Isiolo County, in Kenya’s arid upper eastern region, are semi-nomadic. They move from place to place in search of pastures for their cows, sheep, goats and camels. Recently, flash floods cut off access to several villages. That’s why the new vision centre we’ve established in Garbatulla – in partnership with Garbatulla Sub-County Hospital – is so important. Now there’s a permanent eye clinic people can visit whenever the roads are open or when herders are back from distant pastures.

When I got here, I stayed at a local mission as I hadn’t found a permanent place to live.

A woman there named Hellen was very kind to me, making sure I got my tea each morning and that I had everything I needed to get settled. When I explained what had brought me to Garbatulla, she said she was struggling with her vision. I encouraged her to come to our clinic, where she was diagnosed with a cataract in her left eye. She was concerned that taking time off would disrupt her duties at the mission, but on the day of her operation she showed up and got it done.

I just had lunch with Hellen recently, and she is doing very well and has made a full recovery. I’m grateful to have helped someone who made me feel so welcome when I first got here

Samson Ngyongesa started working for Operation Eyesight in March 2025. He is the Program Coordinator supporting our Johnson & Johnson–funded Hospital–Based Community Eye Health Project in Garbatulla, Kenya. Samson previously worked for the Asante Africa Foundation, implementing a digital transformation strategy in remote parts of East Africa, and he has a background in economics.

Operation Eyesight is excited to participate in the Rotary International Convention in Calgary in June 2025. Be sure to stop by our booth (#355) in the House of Friendship to learn more about our work with Rotary Clubs around the world. You can also visit operationeyesight.com/Rotary2025 for more information.

A woman hugs a small baby close her to chest.
Baby Aarsh was born premature had an eye condition that could have led to irreversible blindness called Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP). Fortunately, through our ROP program in Moradabad, India he was screened and treated and is now thriving. This program is supported by multiple Rotary clubs and run in partnership with CL Gupta Eye Institute.
Mobile vision center
Each year, the Mobile Vision Centre screens thousands of people living rural and remote communities across Nepal. It’s made possible by the Rotary Club of Simcoe, which has been partnering with Operation Eyesight for more than 30 years.

Rotary Clubs: Longstanding champions of sight

In the mountainous Kathmandu Valley of northern Nepal, one in five people lives with vision loss or blindness, according to the Country Data from the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness. For many families in these isolated areas, the journey to access even basic eye care is long, difficult and often impossible.

But through an inspiring partnership between Rotary Clubs and Operation Eyesight, eye health services are now reaching communities once left behind – thanks to innovation, compassion and more than 60 years of partnership. 

Vision on Wheels: A lifeline to rural communities

Rotary Eye hospital Mobile

Powered by the Rotary Club of Simcoe, Vision on Wheels is a mobile eye unit that delivers vital health services directly to the doorsteps of rural families in Nepal. From vision screening and prescription eyeglasses to life-changing cataract surgeries and health education, the Mobile Vision Centre eliminates the barriers of geography and cost – restoring not only sight, but also dignity, hope and opportunity.

A van with the text Vision on Wheels on top

Rotary International and local Rotary Clubs have long played a critical role in advancing global health initiatives, particularly eye health, and we are incredibly grateful for their longstanding support,” says Kashinath Bhoosnurmath, our President & CEO. “Together, we are now addressing the new and emerging causes of blindness and vision loss, renewing hope for families and entire communities.


Art Jenkyns Rotary

A legacy rooted in Rotary values

The connection between Rotary and Operation Eyesight runs deep. In fact, Operation Eyesight’s founder Art Jenkyns, seen in this archival photo (far left), was himself a Rotary member. Since the 1970s, Rotary Club Members have been instrumental in shaping the organization’s mission – contributing more than $1.4 M USD through more than 3,100 individual gifts, including $748,565 since 2020 alone.


Art Jenkyns Rotary

Through these donations, Rotary members have supported Operation Eyesight in:

Their impact spans continents – from the bustling cities of India to remote regions of Kenya, Zambia and Ethiopia. “I believe Rotary’s confidence in Operation Eyesight is rooted in our shared commitment to fighting disease, providing clean water and sanitation, supporting education and promoting gender equality, particularly for mothers and children,” Kashinath adds. “The collaboration between our organizations showcases how Rotary’s local presence and Operation Eyesight’s global reach can have a lasting impact on underserved communities.

A Centennial vision becomes reality

In 2005, to mark Rotary International’s 100th anniversary, the Rotary Club of Calgary Heritage Park, jointly with Rotary Zones 22, 5 and 6A, partnered with Operation Eyesight in an ambitious goal: to provide 100,000 free cataract surgeries across India, Nepal and Sri Lanka, through a “Partners in Vision” campaign.

A Rotary Club of Calgary Heritage Park Newsletter states that two major approvals were provided in December 2004, which covered 48,600 surgeries for a total cost of $1,065,000 USD. Operation Eyesight provided 50 per cent ($533,000 equivalent in USD) of the total funding matching every dollar raised by Rotary Clubs and Districts and other Rotary contributions. In June 2005, three other contributions were approved to fund an additional 16,400 surgeries for a total cost of $367,000 USD. To this amount, Operation Eyesight added 50 per cent (the equivalent of $184,000 USD) of the funding. Operation Eyesight also matched each Rotary dollar with professional expertise and local partnerships.

More than a surgical campaign, the initiative strengthened health systems by requiring participating hospitals to undergo training at the world-renowned L V Prasad Eye Institute – ensuring quality care and sustainability for years to come.

From boardrooms to boreholes

Rotary’s commitment goes beyond eye surgeries. Recognizing the link between clean water and eye health, especially in preventing trachoma – a devastating bacterial infection that causes irreversible blindness if left untreated – Rotary members have supported water and sanitation projects in Ethiopia, Kenya and Zambia that protect and uplift communities.


In 2008, the Ridgewood Rotary Club of New Jersey funded a pump house and handwashing station at Kishermoruak Primary School in Kenya, where a borehole had been drilled by Operation Eyesight. This project now provides clean water to more than 1,000 people, transforming health and education outcomes for the entire community.

“Access to clean water not only prevents the spread of trachoma and other diseases, but also means young girls are able to attend school, because they no longer have to haul water long distances for their families,” explains Caroline Nginda Ikumu, Operation Eyesight’s Country Director for Kenya and Ethiopia.

“Through the generosity and vision of donors and partners, together we are building healthier communities.”

Looking ahead: a shared vision for the future

Our shared vision for a healthier, more equitable world continues to inspire many Rotary members to join Operation Eyesight’s global community. Rotary Clubs have the opportunity to partner on a variety of projects that bring eye health solutions to communities that need them most:

WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) and Health System Strengthening – Integrates eye care with water, sanitation and hygiene, and works with governments to embed services into public health systems, particularly across sub-Saharan Africa.


A tribute to Rotary champions

Rotary eye hospitals

Together with donors and dedicated partners, Operation Eyesight works with local governments and hospitals to create local eye health solutions that address the root causes of vision loss, including lack of access to fresh water, gender inequality, and inadequate education and access to health services. By leveraging the unique strengths of communities, we help ensure the impact of donors is felt long after a project is finished. 

Throughout the years, Rotary Clubs like Calgary West, Grimsby, North Scarborough and Norfolk Sunrise have consistently stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Operation Eyesight. Together, our work has transformed lives in communities across South Asia and Africa.

Rotary eye hospitals
Rotary eye hospitals

Partner hospitals in Operation Eyesight’s countries of work play a key role in the sustainability of services after projects end. In India, facilities established and supported by Indian Rotary Clubs remain key partners in our work to end avoidable vision loss on the subcontinent. The Mela Mal Sood Rotary Eye Hospital in Palampur, Himachal Pradesh, pictured here at its inauguration in 1985, is one of more than two-dozen Rotary eye hospitals we work alongside in partnership and collaboration.

Through Rotary investments, eye health care is becoming a standard part of health systems in not only India but our other countries of work as well.

In addition to providing state-of-the-art affordable ophthalmic services, these facilities offer sight -restoring surgery, treatment and specialized care. Our Rotary partner hospitals in India often function as regional hubs for community outreach, supporting large-scale eye screenings and surgical camps in rural and semi-urban areas. It’s these local and international partnerships that make our work possible.

“Rotary’s confidence in Operation Eyesight is rooted in our shared commitment to fighting disease, providing clean water and education, supporting education and promoting gender equality,” says Bhoosnurmath. “Together, we are restoring sight, dignity and hope.”

One vision, countless lives transformed

The partnership between Rotary and Operation Eyesight continues to evolve. Through initiatives like the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB)-Rotary International Service Partnership, Rotary Clubs are now helping integrate eye care into broader health systems, train local health workers and promote sustainable change.

As Operation Eyesight continues its mission to prevent blindness and restore sight for good, Rotary Clubs remain vital to making this a reality. The tireless energy, strategic leadership and generous spirit of Rotary Club members continue to serve as a beacon of what’s possible when we unite for a greater purpose.

Thank you, Rotary, for helping us see a brighter future – one person, one community and one gift at a time – For All The World To See! Operation Eyesight is excited to participate in the Rotary International Convention in Calgary in June 2025. Be sure to stop by our booth (#355) in the House of Friendship to learn more about our work with Rotary Clubs around the world. You can also visit operationeyesight.com/Rotary2025 for more information


Horibala, from the village of Godashimla, Bangladesh, likes to keep busy. The 65-year-old finds joy and motivation in her favourite pastimes: sewing and travel.

But for years, she was unable to enjoy these activities as her eyes clouded over with cataracts.

“I couldn’t see at all,” she recalls. “Even when I closed one eye to see anything, it was blurry. I felt helpless.”

As her eyesight faded, she found herself depending on others for almost everything. Simple tasks like washing clothes, making a meal or even lighting the cooking stove were impossible.

Things turned around for Horibala after a visit from an optometrist from the Madarganj Vision Centre, run by our partners at Symbiosis International, who was doing a door-to-door survey. The optometrist referred Horibala to our partner institute, the Dr. K. Zaman BNSB Eye Hospital in the nearby city of Mymensingh, for bilateral cataract surgery.

A man hands another man a pair of glasses, while a third man and a woman look on.
Horibala queues up for a checkup at the Madarganj Vision Centre.

Thanks to the generous support of donors like you, her sight was finally restored.

The medication she received at her follow-up appointments relieved the discomfort of watery eyes after surgery. Soon, she regained her ability to see.

“Now, I can do everything. There’s a big difference between being able to see and not seeing at all,” she says. “For the past year, I’ve been able to work, sew and even travel. My life feels normal again.”

A woman sits in her kitchen lighting a cooking fire.
Horibala lights the cooking stove at her home in Godashimla, Bangladesh.

Now overflowing with gratitude for her regained sight, Horibala acts as an advocate in her community, encouraging people to take care of their eyes.

“I tell everyone: if you have an eye problem, don’t wait. Go to this hospital and get treated immediately. Being able to see again is priceless!”

Donate today to help more people like Horibala see clearly again!

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