Cataracts a health scourge for China's poor
By Tan Ee Lyn
Xilinhot, CHINA (Reuters) - Wulanqiqige, a shepherd in Inner Mongolia, has had trouble minding her flock since she went blind in her left eye about three years ago.
But in an operation that took less than 10 minutes, Wulanqiqige had her sight restored. She is among around 4.5 million people in China who are blind or severely visually impaired due to cataracts.
"What I want to see right now are my animals, I haven't been able to enjoy them for so long," the 55-year-old ethnic Mongolian grandmother said, beaming widely when she realized that she could see again after doctors removed her eyepatch.
Cataracts -- the clouding of the lens of the eye which blocks out light eventually causing blindness -- is a major health problem in China.
Country folk are more susceptible because they are constantly exposed to ultra-violet light from the sun which is among the causes of cataracts, and they are often too poor to afford corrective surgery.
There are at least 1 million new cataract cases each year in China. The total number of cases could balloon to 167 million by 2020 because of an ageing population, according to ORBIS, a group that aims to treat and prevent blindness in developing countries.
Cataracts, which often affect older people, cause blindness if left untreated. These days, cataracts are easily treated in developed countries, but treatment is far from accessible and often far too expensive in developing nations.
"There is a lack of medical services in the countryside and most rural folk are poor and can't afford the medical fees," said Dennis Lam, a leading Hong Kong ophthalmologist, who has set up a non-profit charity called "Project Vision" which aims to treat cataract sufferers in rural China.
China has 5 million patients awaiting cataract surgery but only 600,000 are performed a year, or 400 surgeries per million people - a fraction of what is seen in many other countries.
In India, 3,900 cataract surgeries are performed for every million people, while the figures stands at a staggering 10,000 in the United States.
According to the World Health Organisation, 37 million people were blind in 2006 and 124 million had low vision globally. Cataracts was the cause in half of all these cases.
CATARACT TREATMENT
In China, 80 percent of people who need treatment for cataracts live in rural areas, while 70 percent of China's 24,000 eye doctors live and work in cities.
Hospitals in China charge between 2,000 yuan (US$253) and over 10,000 yuan for treating a cataract in one eye -- almost the average annual salary in rural China. The fees are simply unaffordable for many in the country of 1.3 billion people.
Many put off treatment until they get a bumper harvest or can sell the family cow at a good price. Continued...






