A young school girl from India wearing glasses covers her one eye with hand adorned with henna

Screening children in India for World Sight Month

This World Sight Month 2024, Orbis is focusing on children’s eye health worldwide and giving every child the chance to love their eyes. We are calling on parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and caregivers of all sorts to book an eye test for a child you love—and donate to Orbis to help us screen a child in need of eye care.

Love your Eyes campaign logo with Seymour the bear

Eye exams are important for catching issues early and keeping your eyes healthy. This is especially true for children whose vision may not develop properly if a problem is not detected and treated urgently.

Unfortunately, not every child gets the chance to have an exam.

REACH for the stars

This is where the Orbis community comes in. 

Our Refractive Error Among Children (REACH) project aims to reduce visual impairment due to uncorrected refractive error among school-going children and provide a sustainable and scalable solution to a shortage of care.

Last year alone, Orbis and our partners conducted 2.1 million eye screenings and examinations for boys and girls around the world. 

Last year alone, Orbis and our partners conducted 2.1 million eye screenings and examinations for boys and girls around the world.
Young school boys from India wait in a line for an eye screening

Through REACH we partner with schools to deliver eye care at scale.

Through our REACH projects we partner with schools to build teams of eye care professionals and provide them with the tools they need to perform eye exams, distribute eyeglasses, and refer children needing specialized care to vision centers or local hospitals.

Addressing vision impairment can enhance a child's educational opportunities, boost their self-confidence, and make playing and socializing easier. Something as simple as getting glasses can help a child unleash potential and thrive.

A focus on REACH in Siliguri, West Bengal, India

A large group of school children from India smile in a hallway

Children from a REACH-supported school in Siliguri, West Bengal, India.

This World Sight Month our REACH teams are in Siliguri, West Bengal where we aim to reach nearly 400,000 children through 800 schools over the course of the project.

The Orbis team is identifying and treating refractive errors among pupils aged six to 18 in schools by training teachers to spot vision problems, providing students with eye exams, and referring them for treatment at one of three green vision centers or in our partner hospital, the Siliguri Greater Lions Eye Hospital.

World Sight Month: Help screen a child in need of eye care

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Kunti Thought Eye Strain Was Normal

For so long, the 14-year-old thought the eye strain she experienced was normal. The ambitious seventh-grader dreams of being a doctor, which would have proved impossible had her eye problems continued. Fortunately, our REACH team screened Kunti and her fellow pupils at their school in Siliguri where her vision problem was identified and treated.

Kunti was referred for a detailed eye examination at a nearby Orbis-supported vision center, where she was diagnosed with refractive error and prescribed glasses.

She says, “No matter where I sit in the classroom now, I can see the blackboard clearly.” With her new glasses, Kunti helpfully raises awareness of the importance of eye checkups, especially for those that use their cell phones, or spend time watching screens.

Prince’s Poor Vision Could Have Held Him Back

Seventh-grader Prince adores football, and his favorite subject is Hindi. Setting his sights on playing football professionally like his idol Cristiano Renaldo, he starts each morning with a jog through the tea gardens near his home. He could have been held back from his dreams had his vision problems been left undiagnosed.

Fortunately, Prince was screened via our REACH project at his school. After a follow-up screening at an Orbis-supported vision center, he was diagnosed with refractive error and treated with glasses which will make day-to-day life much easier for him.

His grandmother tells us: “Eye health is so important. He’s very young, so it’s really necessary to correct his vision now.”

Thakur Worried Where She Sat in Class

Bright 13-year-old Thakur was challenged by her vision! She needed to study after dark with the help of a very bright light. Without it, she couldn’t read her favorite Hindi adventure storybooks and do her homework.

At school, she developed a strategy of sitting on the bench in the second row—a distance from the teacher and the blackboard that her impaired vision could manage. She also relied upon friends at school to read aloud to her when the letters were too small for her to see.

Thakur’s vision problems were caught by our REACH team who referred her to an Orbis-funded vision center where she was diagnosed with high refractive error and chose a lovely pair of ruby-colored frames to ensure she both looked good and could see well.

Thakur can now see the board at school clearly and is excelling in her studies. To ensure healthy vision, she will have to return there every six months for check-ups.

Thank you for supporting REACH

A huge heartfelt thank you to our wonderful supporters and dedicated partners who are helping us improve eye care for children around the world.

For World Sight Month, donate to Orbis to help even more children access the eye care they deserve.

Donate today

Help us give children a brighter future through REACH!

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