CHICAGO—Prevent Blindness is launching the Center for Vision and Population Health (CVPH) at Prevent Blindness. The new Center will work in direct collaboration with experts from medical, scientific, public health, research and corporate sectors, leverage key stakeholder input, data from improved surveillance efforts (including state and national survey data), and peer-reviewed scientific literature to identify areas of geographic, population, and disease significance that provide opportunities for significant impact. The launch coincides with a paper issued by JAMA Ophthalmology yesterday, titled “Eye and Vision Health for Tomorrow: From Recommendations to Coordinated Action,” which provides strategies to coordinate national efforts to protect vision.

A 2016 report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM), “Making Eye Health a Population Health Imperative: Vision for Tomorrow,” advanced a number of recommendations for improving eye health in the U.S. Among the ensuing discussion was the need for a coordinated national effort that engages key stakeholders to advance vision and eye health from a population health perspective.

“The NASEM Report emphasized current gaps and the pressing need for action, but executing its recommendations will require coordinated efforts from stakeholders across public health, policy, community, and clinical arenas” said Heather E. Whitson, MD, MHS, co-author of the NASEM report and associate professor of medicine, associate professor in ophthalmology, and deputy director of the Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development at Duke University. She added, “Prevent Blindness and its Center for Vision and Population Health are perfectly positioned to serve as the ‘backbone’ of this effort.”

Prevent Blindness, the nation’s oldest volunteer eye health and safety organization, is committed to convening stakeholders in vision, public health, and patient advocacy to address the barriers to healthy vision and work to increase the uniformity of vision preservation nationally. CVPH has been established, the organization said, as a national coordinating body for effective practices, state-level technical assistance, and programmatic interventions. The information, resources, and guidance developed by this new Center will result in increased awareness about eye health and preventive practices that can be integrated into existing health and social service programs, ultimately elevating the attention given to eye health in the context of public health programs.

In the paper, Prevent Blindness president and CEO, Jeff Todd, along with co-authors Dr. Whitson and Edwin C. Marshall, OD, MS, MPH, professor emeritus of Optometry and Public Health, Indiana University, addressed the various challenges facing, and provided strategies for such a center in the JAMA Ophthalmology paper.

The information, resources, and guidance developed by this new Center will result in increased awareness about eye health and preventive practices that can be integrated into existing health and social service programs, ultimately elevating the attention given to eye health in the context of public health programs.

As part of the launch of the CVPH, Prevent Blindness is establishing an Advisory Committee, chaired by Dr. Whitson, and staffed by Kira Baldonado, vice president of Public Health and Policy at Prevent Blindness. The Advisory Committee will include experts in the fields of ophthalmology, optometry, epidemiology, geriatrics, minority health, public health and patient advocacy.

“The NASEM report has been monumental in elevating the need facing this country and in presenting multiple areas of improvement for our nation’s vision health,” said Todd. “Now is the time for all those working to address vision and eye health to coordinate and streamline our efforts to effectively improve access to quality eyecare, promote research, and establish best practices to improve eye health today and for generations to come.”