Hope rises for Nigerians with eye-related ailments

Nigerians with various degrees of eye-related ailments are in for a relief as Skipper Seil Group, in partnership with Eye-Q, recently unveiled a state-of-the-art facility known as Skipper Eye-Q Super Specialty Eye Hospital in Lagos.
The facility which aims to provide a world-class diagnostic, medical, surgical and optical ophthalmic services in Nigeria was commissioned by the Cross River State governor, Ben Ayade, in the company of Aliko Dangote, president, Dangote Group, Ibrahim Jikamshi, special adviser on Entrepreneurship to Katsina State governor, Fidelis Anosike, publisher/editor-in-chief, Daily Times, Ronald Chagoury, chairman, Eko Atlantic Group, among others.
Speaking at the unveiling ceremony, Ajay Sharma, founder, Eye-Q Eye Super Specialty Hospital, India, who rolled out various plans of the hospital to improve eye care services in Nigeria, said the hospital was established to assist Nigerians with visual impairments regain their sight and to also save them the trouble of travelling abroad for treatment.
Sharma, one of the most renowned eye surgeons in India, said having such a facility in Nigeria was long overdue considering the fact that 4.5 million adults in Nigeria aged 40 years and above were visually impaired or blind, based on the National Blindness and Visual Impairment Survey conducted in 2005-2007.
“In a bid to enable more people to access medical care, the JV-Skipper Eye-Q Nigeria aims to improve medical services in the region. It is committed to deliver its services using the most advanced, progressive and highest standards of quality eye care at affordable price and we have a team of highly qualified and experienced ophthalmologists to provide the best possible service,” Sharma said.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 285 million people are estimated to be visually impaired worldwide: 39 million are blind and 246 million have low vision.
WHO also says that about 90 percent of the world’s visually impaired live in low-income settings like Nigeria.
Sharma, therefore, said the hospital would invest $20 million in eye services in Nigeria through the establishment of 30 eye centres in the next few years, which will further help the country to achieve the Global Eye Health Action Plan 2014-2019, which seeks to reduce avoidable visual impairment as a global public health problem and to secure access to rehabilitation services for the visually impaired.
“Skipper Eye-Q Super Specialty Eye Hospital had started partnering with four states in the country – Kaduna, Kano, Katsina and Cross River – to improve their ophthalmology clinics and upgrade their facilities,” he noted.
According to him, the hospital will be involved in the training of Nigerian doctors with ultra-modern facilities on surgeries and different eye care so as to enhance their performance and services, apart from offering Corporate Social Responsibility services.
“The hospital will be creating jobs for Nigerians,” Sharma noted.
Governor Ayade, who commissioned the hospital, said Nigerians would be happy with it as it would help in reducing medical tourism.
“We have intelligent and smart doctors, but the equipments are not there. Now that we have this state-of-the-art facility in place, it is an opportunity for our doctors to learn and upgrade their knowledge in eye care services,” he said.
To enable the people of Cross River State access quality eye care at a very affordable price, the governor said he had already signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the hospital.
“Vision is important. Without vision, you are nothing. My responsibility after the commissioning is to take the innovation and technology home. I have given a contract to the management of the hospital to replicate same in my state,” Ayade said.
In his remarks, Dangote, who expressed delight at the establishment of the facility, said his foundation would work with the hospital to provide free eye care services to the poor, stressing that provision of effective and accessible eye care services was key for effectively controlling visual impairment including blindness.
“The foundation will also support the training of doctors,” he added.
Jitendra Sachdeva, group president, Skipper Nigeria, said Nigeria had an alarming number of visually impaired people and, therefore, needed such specialized state-of-the-art hospitals that could treat all kinds of eye ailments.
“With the launch of this centre, we look forward to catering for the country’s population and providing best eye care facility to the people. As a community healthcare provider, our main focus will be on the primary and secondary eye care needs of local people of Lagos and its neigbourhoods,” Sachdeva said.
Jide Idris, Lagos State Commissioner for Health, said having Skipper Eye-Q Super Specialty Eye Hospital in Lagos was a plus for the state as it would boost the state’s services on eye care.
Apart from improving eye care in the state, Idris pointed out the hospital would assist in building capacity locally and also update the knowledge of eye care professionals in the state.
“We have shortage of human resources in all specialties and eye care is one of them. Establishing the hospital in Lagos State is more like a plus to us. It is a positive thing because they have compact equipment that will help boost our services in eye care,” he said.
He urged Nigerians to carry out regular eye check to help prevent glaucoma which causes irreversible blindness if detected late.
TIAMIYU ADIO
 
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