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Our partnership with Cure Blindness Project

Cure Blindness Project and The Fred Hollows Foundation have announced a landmark strategic partnership that aims to help end avoidable blindness in Rwanda and Laos by 2035 and significantly address the cataract backlog in at least three other countries. 

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A landmark strategic partnership designed to accelerate the elimination of avoidable blindness worldwide

The partnership, which brings together two of the world’s most respected and influential organisations in the global eye health sector, is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to transform millions of lives through restoring sight.

By combining complementary strengths and shared ambition, the partnership aims to work with local governments and partners to deliver transformative, scalable impact in the fight to eliminate avoidable blindness and build sustainable eye health systems.

Despite decades of progress, vision impairment and avoidable blindness continue to rise globally. More than 43 million people are blind and often unable to do the tasks of daily living. Another 1 billion people are not thriving because they cannot see clearly. A staggering 90% of people with sight loss live in low and middle-income countries where access to eye health is often out of reach.

This partnership is a direct response to this challenge

Two leading organisations with a combined 60+ years of experience joining forces around bold, shared goals to accelerate progress toward universal eye health access and unlock the potential of millions of people.

According to the Value of Vision report, targeted investment in simple eye health priorities - from improving cataract surgery to providing on-the-spot reading glasses - would yield a $1:$28 return on investment in low- and middle-income countries – one of the best in global health.

Working with the governments of Rwanda and Laos, The Fred Hollows Foundation has developed new 10-year investment plans which outline a clear pathway to eliminate the cataract backlog and build a resilient, people-centred eye health system that can sustainably meet future needs.

To achieve this, a US$41.1 million in investment is needed in Rwanda by 2035.

This funding would support to close the current and expected cataract backlog, establish and strengthen 14 specialised eye units across the country, train 25 new ophthalmologists and 58,000 community health workers, and embed eye care into Rwanda’s national health systems. Existing ophthalmologists will also be trained as sub-specialists where gaps exist.

In Laos a total investment of US$12.73 million is needed over the next five years. This funding will support 66,000 cataract surgeries, train 126 new eye health personnel — including 20 cataract surgeons — and equip 37 hospitals across all 17 provinces.

With strong backing from the Ministries of Health and partners including the Tilganga Institute of Ophthalmology from Nepal and local leaders in each country, this initiative will build a resilient, government-led eye health system that protects sight for generations to come.

This partnership will actively engage governments, funders, communities, local clinical leaders, and selected NGO partners to ensure eye health solutions are locally-owned and sustainable long after external support ends.

Alongside implementing partners and government allies, the partnership will clear cataract backlogs, trial innovative models of care, build more sustainable local systems, and unlock breakthrough funding.

This is a pivotal moment for global eye health. The magnitude of avoidable blindness and systemic barriers to eye health demand collaboration across organisations, sectors, and geographies. Together with our colleagues at The Fred Hollows Foundation, we will reduce surgical backlogs, train more local eye care professionals, and strengthen health systems so that quality eye care becomes a reality for everyone, everywhere.

K-T Overbey
CEO, Cure Blindness Project
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Fred Hollows always believed that sight was a basic human right. This partnership embodies that belief. By combining our expertise in addressing cataract backlogs, health systems strengthening, workforce development, and policy influence with Cure Blindness Project’s expertise in delivering high-volume surgical care and ophthalmic training programs in underserved areas, we can drive bolder, faster progress toward universal eye health coverage, starting in Rwanda and Laos.

Ross Piper
CEO, The Fred Hollows Foundation
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