When we met Dr. Celiz, the eye health hero had saved the vision of a young girl named Genesis, who was born at 26 weeks weighing just over a pound. Through careful monitoring from birth, she is recovering from grade 3 ROP, and because they acted swiftly, the outlook is good for Genesis, who is now four years old,
She will see even better in the future with follow-up treatment to correct her strabismus (squint), a small complication of ROP. He shares: “I think she is a patient with a very good prognosis. For a child, up to the age of 8, they must develop all of their visual capacity. May it reach 100% or 20/20. And this we are going to help her with the lenses that normally improve.”
And while patients just like Genesis have a brighter future ahead, he would like to see more training, the latest technology, and better policies that will improve the timing and delivery of treatment of ROP. As he says, "In retinal patients, the delay time is high, it is long and sometimes the retina doesn't forgive.”
While great strides have been made, it is clear there is still much work to do to ensure Dr. Celiz and eye teams all over the world can give premature babies the best start in life.
But did you also know that it can cost less than $5 to examine a premature infant for ROP – and less than $250 to provide vision-saving treatment to a newborn in need?
That’s why a limited-time matching gift opportunity – made possible by long-time supporter, Mrs. Leslys Vedder – is so impactful. Make your gift by 8/31 to help provide premature babies with the vision care they need.
Your gift of $25 (now doubled to $50) can help provide ROP screenings for 10 premature infants.
While your gift of $50 (now doubled to $100) can help provide screenings for 20 babies born prematurely.
And your generous gift of $125 (now doubled to $250) can help provide the treatment needed to save a newborn baby’s vision.
Or your special gift of any amount will be MATCHED to help save babies’ sight – giving them back potentially decades-worth of healthy sight for the rest of their lives.