NEW YORK—As the world marks World Sight Day 2022, the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB) welcomes the biggest celebration of this important global awareness day with millions participating worldwide. IAPB, which leads World Sight Day, has recorded over five million sight test pledges from individuals and organizations, a significant uplift in the number of eyes tested from prior years, leading to greater public awareness of the importance of taking care of one’s own eye health. The international umbrella body for the sight sector asked its members to host vision screenings in parliaments, assemblies and alongside decision makers around the world.

The flagship screening event was held at the United Nations headquarters in New York on October 11, with UN Ambassadors joining administrators, security staff, catering staff and other UN staff members to get their eyes tested. The UN screening mirrored similar events happening in Australia, Uganda, India, United Arab Emeritus, the U.S. and more.

IAPB hosted the first ever Love Your Eyes Voices in New York, an event that brought together some of the world’s thought leaders, including those from the UN, governments, business and the eye health sector to share inspiration and celebrate the historic UN Resolution on Vision.

 
 A number of International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB) members came together from across the eye health sector to share in the critical work to elevate vision as a development priority at the United Nations in NY. (L to R) Seen here are Jess Blijkers, Light for the World; Imran A. Khan, Sightsavers; Stuart Cockerill and Jennifer Lambert, CooperVision; Sophie Babcock, Horizon; Juliana Richardson, Novartis; Jacqueline Grove and Reade Fahs, National Vision Inc.; and Iris Van den Brande and Nilesh Mehta of Roche.
  
Speaking via video to IAPB’s Love Your Eyes Voices event, Amina J. Mohammed, deputy general secretary of the United Nations and chair of the United Nations Sustainable Development Group said, “This World Sight Day provides us with an opportunity to celebrate progress in the field of eyecare, in global public health and development agendas. Globally, more than two billion people are blind or visually impaired, and this figure represents the tip of the iceberg—eye conditions are universal and many of us will experience at least one eye condition that requires care.”

She continued, “We must strengthen cross sector partnership with education, social services, labor, and the private sector to improve eye health for all. Let us work together on World Sight Day, and every day, toward a world where everyone can fulfil their potential and live their lives on an equal basis. Mohammed has written a letter stating: "unless we address this, there’s a chance the next generation will grow up believing this lie about themselves."

Commenting on this year’s successful World Sight Day, Caroline Casey IAPB president said, "At a time when global issues seem insurmountable, the huge momentum building around this year's World Sight Day is evidence that collective action drives change and of the enormous work going on to deliver accessible, available and affordable eyecare for all. Ending avoidable sight loss is possible, and it is essential. One billion people being needlessly blind can no longer be tolerated, especially when there is a solution.

“The work that eye health professions do worldwide is building the awareness needed around the vital issue of sight and eyecare including uncorrected refractive error, cataract, glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy. I’d like to acknowledge the entire sight sector for getting behind World Sight Day and urging everyone in the world to do their part in ending avoidable sight loss by being accountable and commuting to love their eyes.

“We have been blown away by the number of people who have got involved this year and pledged their eye tests, including thousands of members of the public, eye health organizations and professionals,” Casey said.


United Nations #LoveYourEyes screening in New York City with International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB) members, The Fred Hollows Foundation, OneSight Enterprise, Sightsavers & VisionSpring alongside colleagues from World Health Organization to celebrate #worldsightday.
Chair of the UN Friends of Vision Group and Antigua and Barbuda’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Walton Webson said, “World Sight Day is such an important moment to raise awareness of an issue that affects over a billion people but can be solved this decade. We know that 90 percent of sight loss is preventable or treatable, yet millions of people are without care because they cannot afford or access it.”

World Sight Day forms part of the Love Your Eyes campaign, which calls on global leaders, policy makers, changemakers and innovators from all countries, industries and communities to help make eye health accessible, available and affordable to everyone by 2030. The campaign also engages the public to consider their own eye health, prioritize caring for their eyes and seek out eye health.

IAPB is the overarching alliance for the global eyecare sector with 150 members worldwide drawn from NGOs and civil society, corporate organizations, professional bodies and research and eyecare institutions.