March 1, 2022, NEW YORK – Today, Orbis proudly celebrates 40 years of innovation to fight avoidable blindness. On this day in 1982, Orbis's iconic Flying Eye Hospital – a fully accredited ophthalmic teaching hospital on board a plane – took its first flight, launching a legacy of innovation that has continued to define Orbis over the past four decades.
“Orbis’s founders had a simple yet ambitious vision when they first conceived of the Flying Eye Hospital four decades ago: to end avoidable blindness by providing training to eye care teams around the world,” said Derek Hodkey, President & CEO of Orbis International. “That vision hasn’t changed. We still believe that the best way to save sight is to bring people together to share knowledge, skills and support. What has changed is that, today, we have more ways to bring more people together than ever before.”
Since 1982, three generations of the Flying Eye Hospital have taken training to eye care teams in over 95 countries around the world, while Orbis has continued to innovate and grow its work beyond that carried out on the plane to achieve scalable impact.
Over the past four decades, Orbis has conducted tens of millions of eye screenings and conducted eye surgeries and laser treatments for hundreds of thousands of patients. Orbis has also trained hundreds of thousands of eye care professionals at all levels – including tens of thousands of medical doctors. The people Orbis trains go on to provide sight-saving care in their communities and, in many cases, go on to train eye care professionals themselves.