Al-Shifa organises free eye camps in remote areas

By Muhammad Qasim
July 05, 2022

Rawalpindi: In a bid to provide free eye care services to the poor living in remote areas of the country, Al-Shifa Trust Eye Hospital organised free eye camps at Jiwani, Balochistan, a remote area near Pak-Iran Border and Gwadar.

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Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) and 44 Medical Battalion of the Army helped the team of Al-Shifa Trust comprising 22 members to complete the task. Thousands of people, including women and children representing the underprivileged community, were tested, hundreds of surgeries were performed and many were given free medicine and spectacles, said Colonel (r) Tariq Usman, DG Outreach Programme Al-Shifa Trust.

He said that patients with complicated issues were referred to the base hospitals for further management as these measures have been highly helpful in the early diagnosis of curable eye diseases in patients who can then be treated accordingly and prevent them from becoming handicapped later in life. COVID tests were also performed because of the resurgence of the pandemic, although present on a small scale, he added.

He informed that elders and locals of the area appreciated the efforts of Al-Shifa Trust Eye Hospital and the army in arranging free surgical eye camps to provide much-needed health care to the local population many of whom lack the resources to travel to cities and afford treatment.

The provision of eye care services in such far-flung areas has served as a great social endeavour and will serve as a goodwill tool among the local population, he observed. He lauded the role of Captain (r) Jameel Ahmed, DC Gwadar, Ikram Ullah Kansi, RC OGDCL Quetta, DHO Gwadar, MS DHQ Hospital, and Eye Specialist DHQ Hospital Gwadar who helped the trust to combat diseases and serve the poor unconditionally which is a sacred mission. Tariq Usman said that the report regarding free eye camps has been presented to the President of the trust.

It may be mentioned that the trust started its outreach program in 1992 to deliver quality eye care at the doorstep of the community in rural and underserved populations. It is the biggest programme for the prevention of blindness in the country and so far over a million patients have been treated.

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