Flying Eye Hospital
Orbis is an international nonprofit best known for our Flying Eye Hospital: a plane unlike any you’ve seen before! It's a state-of-the-art teaching facility complete with operating room, classroom, and recovery room—this amazing aircraft has been an example of the marriage between medicine and aviation since 1982.
Flying Eye Hospital - interactive timeline
From 1982 to the present day—and from a DC-8 to an MD-10—step aboard the Flying Eye Hospital and see history in the making.
Three generations of the Flying Eye Hospital
Since its launch in 1982, the Orbis Flying Eye Hospital has evolved through three generations of aircraft, each one expanding our ability to deliver world-class eye care and training around the globe. The first-generation Flying Eye Hospital was a donated Douglas DC-8 from United Airlines. This American four-engine jet was then converted into the world’s first fully equipped teaching eye hospital.
As Orbis’s mission grew, so did our plane: in 1992, a donated DC-10 wide-body aircraft became our second-generation Flying Eye Hospital, doubling the space to accommodate a larger classroom and advanced surgical facilities. After more than two decades of service, it passed the torch to today’s state-of-the-art third-generation aircraft—an MD-10 donated by FedEx employees and outfitted with cutting-edge medical technology. This modern marvel, launched in 2016, can travel nearly twice as far as its predecessor, requires only two pilots, and brings world-class ophthalmic training to eye care teams wherever it lands.
Flying Eye Hospital touches down in Ghana
Our one-of-a-kind aircraft has landed in Accra, Ghana to carry out a three-week ophthalmic training project.
A Classroom in the Sky
The Flying Eye Hospital is the world’s only fully accredited ophthalmic teaching hospital on board an MD-10 aircraft. Equal parts teacher, advocate, and envoy in the global effort to end avoidable blindness, our state-of-the-art flying plane allows our clinical team and world-leading Volunteer Faculty (medical experts) to travel the world, sharing knowledge and developing the skills of eye care professionals in the communities that need it most.
Once a cargo plane, the interior of our third-generation Flying Eye Hospital, an MD-10 donated by FedEx, was completely transformed with the support of our many generous partners.
Over the past four decades, thanks to our compassionate supporters, three generations of the Flying Eye Hospital have taken world-class training to eye care teams in 80+ countries and been a call to action for better eye care around the world. Wherever it lands, it raises awareness, creates change, and rallies supporters—from local governments, global organizations, and philanthropists to the general public—to join the global effort to end avoidable blindness.
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Inside the Flying Eye Hospital.
The Power of the Plane
The Flying Eye Hospital is invited to help train local eye care teams by officials in every country where it lands. Not only does it provide a space to train doctors, nurses, biomedical technicians, and other eye care professionals, but it also opens the doors to prime ministers, presidents, and ministries of health so that we can make the case for investing in eye health for all. Our amazing staff and volunteers can then work in partnership with local hospitals to understand skills shortages and work where the need is greatest.
This level of access has allowed Orbis to help change health policies for the better, reach eye care teams in need of training, improve the lives of those lacking access to care, and develop lasting bonds with people around the globe to ensure long-term impact.
The Latest Technology
The Flying Eye Hospital is not only packed with the latest medical equipment; it has some of the very latest training facilities, too. The entire plane is outfitted with an advanced audio visual system that allows training participants in the classroom to watch surgeries happening in the operating room live in 3D—making it as close to the real thing as looking down the microscope yourself. A two-way microphone also allows training participants to ask questions about the operation and for the surgeon to share details about the procedure, enhancing the learning opportunity.
The aircraft also features a state-of-the-art mobile simulation center. Just as pilots learn to fly planes through simulation training before taking off from the runway, simulation training in ophthalmology allows eye care teams to build their skills and confidence safely before progressing to real-life surgeries.
Inside the Flying Eye Hospital, Orbis offers simulation training using technology like virtual reality, artificial eyes, and life-like manikins, allowing for complex surgical procedures to be broken down into smaller parts. This gives eye care professionals the opportunity to practice each step as many times as they need to get it right, something that’s not possible with an actual patient. As a result, simulation training has been shown to improve surgical outcomes for patients.
Whether a program offers simulation training or live surgical training, Orbis always creates tailored and customized curricula for our partner hospitals’ needs, based on what skills are most needed locally and their equipment's capabilities. Volunteer Faculty train local eye care teams both on board the aircraft and at their local hospital, providing education that is both high-quality and practical for when the Flying Eye Hospital departs.
And thanks to our telemedicine platform, Cybersight, eye care professionals from all over the world can join our training programs with the click of a button. Training activities, including live lectures and surgeries, on board the Flying Eye Hospital are broadcast via the platform to partner hospitals and classrooms around the globe.
Blended Learning
The pandemic taught us many valuable lessons about virtual learning. In 2020, Orbis reimagined in-person Flying Eye Hospital trainings as virtual ones to ensure that eye care teams could still access critical training safely during the pandemic. Orbis reached nine countries in 2020 and 34 countries in 2021 through virtual Flying Eye Hospital projects. Now that in-person programming is back in action, we plan to continue with a method of “blended learning” to give eye care professionals a more well-rounded education.
Find out more about this amazing aircraft and take a virtual reality tour - the next best thing to visiting it in person.
Take a tourBlended learning is the combination of in-person simulation and surgical training on board the Flying Eye Hospital with tailored virtual training offered at home via Cybersight, Orbis’s telemedicine and e-learning platform. This model adopts the best of both training methods into one, ensuring that participants can begin their education before the plane arrives and continue their education after the plane leaves.
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