The Manila Times

UN urges tougher eye care for 1B folk

UNITED NATIONS: The UN General Assembly approved its first-ever resolution on vision Friday, calling on its 193 member nations to ensure access to eye care for everyone in their countries, which would contribute to a global effort to help at least 1.1 billion people with vision impairment who currently lack eye services by 2030.

The “Vision for Everyone” resolution, sponsored by Bangladesh, Antigua and Ireland, and cosponsored by over 100 countries, was adopted by consensus by the world body.

It encourages countries to institute a “whole of government approach to eye care.” And it calls on INTERNATIONAL fiNANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND DONORS TO PROVIDE TARGETED financing, especially for developing countries, to address the increasing impact of vision loss on economic and social development.

According to the resolution, “at least 2 billion people are living with vision impairment or blindness and 1.1 billion people have vision impairment that could have been prevented or is yet to be addressed.”

Global eye care needs are projected to increase substantially, with half the global population expected to be living with a vision impairment by 2050,” the resolution says.

Bangladesh’s UN Ambassador Rabab Fatima introduced the RESOLUTION, STRESSING ITS fiRST-EVER focus on vision, and calling it “a long overdue recognition of the central role that healthy vision plays in human life and for sustainable development.”

He said over 90 percent of the 1.1 billion people worldwide with vision loss live in low- and middle-income countries, adding that 55 percent of blind people are women and girls.

On average, the loss of sight costs the global economy “a staggering amount of $411 billion in productivity each year,” Fatima said. And access to eye care services can increase household spending per capita by 88 percent “and the odds of obtaining paid employment by 10 percent.”

While General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding, THEY DO REflECT GLOBAL OPINION.

Fatima said it was critical for the assembly to convey the UN’s “unequivocal commitment to ensure proper eye care facilities for everyone, everywhere, to prevent conditions which can lead to serious and permanent damages.”

He called the resolution an “opportunity to change the lives of millions who are living in blindness or with impaired vision.”

The resolution stresses that access to eye care is essential to achieve UN goals for 2030 to end poverty and hunger, ensure healthy lives and quality education, and reduce inequality.

It calls on all nations to mobilize resources and support to ensure eye care for all people in their countries, in order to reach at least 1.1 billion people worldwide “who have a vision impairment and currently do not have access to the eye care services that they need” by 2030.

World

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2021-07-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

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The Manila Times