
Vietnam
There are 300,000 adults and 23,000 children in Vietnam who are blind. While blindness in Vietnam has decreased over the last decade, the country continues to struggle with providing eye care, especially in rural areas. Quality of care, training and human resources still remain problematic, and overall awareness of how to prevent blindness is low.
300,000
people suffer from blindness

23,000
children are blind

3 million
children are visually impaired
In school, Hoa’s classmates mocked the appearance of her eyes, calling her “squinter”. Her schoolwork suffered because she couldn’t see clearly. See how Orbis helped to make Hoa’s magic wish come true.
Success in Vietnam
We began collaborating with Vietnam’s ophthalmic communities through hospital-based projects in 1996. A permanent office was established in Hanoi in 2003. Orbis has been providing the highest level of expertise to support the development of eye care services and blindness prevention in Vietnam – especially in the areas of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), pediatric and cataract services and in establishing an eye bank.
In 2010 Dr. Black, a pediatric ophthalmologist from New Orleans, Louisiana, treated eight-year-old Quang Chien for strabismus. Find out what happened when Dr Black returned to see her again.
Since 2015, Orbis has worked to strengthen the eye health system in the country, focusing on the quality of services and human resources.
In 2019 alone, we delivered

50,000
Patients accessing eye care services

100,000
Community eye screenings & examinations

20,000
Glasses prescribed

12,000
Eye surgeries performed in hospitals
What we're doing next
Orbis plans to address the constraints of eye care system in Vietnam through three key strategies: expanding quality pediatric eye care services in more regions across the country; strengthening human resources for eye health; and increasing the availability of eye care services for diabetic patients.
Our work includes developing models to ensure quality of care and quality of human resources that can be replicated and maintained by the government. The first model reflecting international standards for diabetic retinopathy – which poses a risk to four million people with diabetes in Vietnam – is in the pilot stage and requires further resources to be replicated nationwide.
With your support we can continue reforming ophthalmic education in Vietnam and advocating for eye health to become a priority on the public health agenda.
Help us prevent avoidable blindness in Vietnam
DONATEPartners
- Vietnam Ministry of Health
- international council of Ophthalmology (ICO)
- National Health Service (NHS)