Al-Shifa Trust launches mobile eye surgery unit

By APP
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May 01, 2025
OGDCL Managing Director Ahmed Hayat Lak (centre) cuts ribbon to launch mobile operation theatre (OT)at THQ Hospital Fateh Jang on April 30, 2025. — Screengrab via Facebookalshifaeyerwp

Rawalpindi:In a decisive step toward reducing avoidable blindness in underserved regions of the country, the Al-Shifa Trust (AST) has launched a fully equipped mobile operation theatre (OT) donated by the Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL), says a press release.

The high-tech unit comprising three fully trucks will bring life-changing eye surgeries to the doorsteps of those who cannot afford travel or access to hospitals located in major cities, significantly improving their quality of life.

At the handover ceremony held at THQ Hospital Fateh Jang, Major General (r) Rehmat Khan, President of Al-Shifa Trust, called the mobile OT 'a beacon of hope" for rural communities.

He said that through our Al-Shifa Centre for Community Ophthalmology (ACCO), we are committed to reaching people where help is needed most. The AST operates one of the country's most extensive outreach programs for preventing blindness. During the 2024-25 financial year, nearly 360,000 schoolchildren were screened for vision problems, he informed.

Maj. Gen. Rehmat Khan added that 700 eye camps have already been held this year, a 30% increase over last year, and we are determined to go further in our mission to prevent avoidable blindness.

He informed that the mobile unit, built to international standards, can perform up to 100 eye surgeries daily in areas lacking surgical facilities. Dr. Muhammad Najam Ul Hasnat, the outreach program's general manager, said this mobile OT is sterile, self-contained, and ready to serve communities in even the most remote locations.

OGDCL Managing Director Ahmed Hayat Lak, who was chief guest at the occasion, highlighted the organization's longstanding support of Al-Shifa Trust. He said that since 2017, we've sponsored 160 surgical camps, enabled 28,000 surgeries, treated over 260,000 patients, and screened 75,000 schoolchildren.