2015 Emory Eye Magazine | Page 15

LOCAL EFFORTS Haddad’s vision for GO-Emory focuses considerable attention on local needs in Georgia. His goal is to eliminate avoidable blindness through GO-Emory’s Vision 2020 Georgia project, which aligns with Vision 2020, the rightto-sight initiative of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness, to eliminate avoidable blindness globally by 2020. Locally, GO-Emory will work in partnership with the Georgia Vision Collaborative. WHO and some 20 international non-government organizations provide guidance and technical and resource screened 177 children for vision problems and eye disease and found problems in 25% of the children. Lenhart and Russ saw 40 children in follow-up exams; 68% subsequently received glasses from the Georgia Lions Lighthouse. In other work close to home, Haddad leads a course in Emory’s Rollins School of Public Health to teach students about the burden of eye disease in this and other countries. The course, “Vision Health: A Global Perspective,” now in its third year, continues to grow in enrollment. Representatives of Prevent Blindness Georgia and the Georgia Lions Lighthouse, among others, join Haddad, Courtright, Lewallen, and other ophthalmology faculty in contributing to the course. As part of Global Ophthalmology at Emory, Emory clinicians work locally and globally, treating patients in south Georgia, Vietnam (above left) and Madagascar (above right) and teaching public health students at Emory (above center). support to countries whose people are affected by trachoma and other preventable and/or treatable eye diseases. Through GO-Emory initiatives, Haddad’s five-year plan is to bring the same kind of resources to Georgia, where considerable challenges exist to provide vision care to populations who desperately need it, yet are left out because of vast disparities in access. Many Georgians who have a potentially blinding disorder may be unaware of their condition. Glaucoma, for example, has no early symptoms. It is typically detected during a comprehensive eye exam. Haddad stresses that a plan to fill in the gaps for provision of eye care is absolutely necessary in Georgia for adults and children in at-risk populations. One such population is migrant farmworkers in rural Georgia, near Bainbridge and Valdosta. Last summer, pediatric ophthalmologist Phoebe Lenhart and Emory medical student Rebecca Russ organized a two-week pediatric vision screening initiative, the Farmworker Vision Project, as part of a rural migrant farmworker’s project organized each year by Emory schools of medicine and nursing. She and others EFFORTS ABROAD Over the past year, GO-Emory physicians have traveled to various destinations around the globe to treat patients and provide training to clinicians there. More than 80% of blindness in developing countries is avoidable or curable. Madagascar—A team of four Emory Eye Center physicians traveled to this country this year, for the second year in a row, with a dual mission of fact finding and helping train local ophthalmologists in clinics in Antsirabe and in Antananarivo (Tana), the capital. The team included oculoplastics surgeon Brent Hayek, glaucoma expert Annette Giangiacomo, and pediatric ophthalmologist Phoebe Lenhart. Hayek says conditions there are a challenge for those needing eye care: there are only 25 to 35 ophthalmologists in Madagascar to serve some 20 million people. Hayek taught local ophthalmologists practical oculoplastic procedures by performing and supervising more than a dozen surgeries. Giangiacomo worked with local ophthalmologists to train them in current glaucoma 2015 | E m o ry E ye 13