Flying Eye Hospital Lands in Vietnam | Orbis

Flying Eye Hospital Lands in Vietnam

Our world-class Flying Eye Hospital has arrived in Hue, Vietnam, for a three-week teaching and training project working alongside the Ministry of Health and the Hue Eye Hospital.

The project marks the tenth time our Flying Eye Hospital has visited Vietnam since 2006. In the last 13 years, more than 1,500 patients have been examined on the aircraft, with nearly 800 adults and children receiving sight saving surgery on board the plane.

Of course, the plane is primarily a teaching facility, so the real impact comes in those we train - around 1,300 doctors, nurses and medical technicians have received training on board the plane from some of the best ophthalmologists, nurses and biomedical engineers in the world.

Dr Tim McCulley

Orbis Volunteer Faculty

You can go to any remote part of the world, do a hun­dred surg­eries, you help 100 patients which is good but it’s not that good because there are mil­lions of patients. What’s good about Orbis is when we come here to teach, we hand­pick care­ful­ly select­ed physi­cians that have gaps in their knowl­edge and things that are cur­rent­ly not being pro­vid­ed for the local com­mu­ni­ty. We come here, we spend a week, we teach the local physi­cians so they can con­tin­ue for­ward with these tech­niques. That way we end up tak­ing care of much more than 100 patients.

Our Flying Eye Hospital supports our long-term eye health programs in Vietnam and is a vital part of our strategy – not only providing state-of-the art training equipment like the Collins Aerospace Mobile Simulation Center – but also raising vital awareness with governments and ministries of health.

We actually began working in Vietnam as far back as 1996, ten years before the plane first touched down. By 2000 we had helped set up a number of long-term projects, and by 2003, we had established a permanent office in Hanoi. In 2018 alone, our Vietnam team helped train 1,750 eye health professionals, screen 200,000 children, prescribe 40,000 pairs of eyeglasses and perform 9,000 eye surgeries.

Image gallery: The Flying Eye Hospital arrives at Hue International Airport

The plane touched down at Hue international airport on Friday in sweltering conditions, but this is something our team of expert volunteers are used to by now. Over the next three weeks, 25 Volunteer Faculty from 12 countries will be sharing their skills with local eye teams – including Thuong Huynh from

Kensington Eye Institute in Toronto, ON.

Sarah Yeoman – Communications Manager for our Flying Eye Hospital told us: "It’s hot and it’s humid, especially in the local hospitals which don’t have air con. So screening day gets a bit sticky. Fortunately the plane is a little cooler, but this is nothing our amazing volunteers aren’t used to. Most of them have been on several projects like this, and they know how important it is to battle through the conditions and make sure everyone gets the most out of their time”.

Week one – sponsored by OMEGA Watches - is now underway, with a focus on oculoplastics, glaucoma and retina. Screening day has just taken place where our team of Volunteer Faculty found some strong test cases, which will allow local partners to get the most from watching and participating in the surgery.

Image gallery: Screening day at the Hue Eye Hospital

Surgery will take place in the plane’s Operating Room, where local teams will be able to ask questions in real-time from our onboard classroom. In addition to being broadcast in 3D in the plane's 46-seat classroom, the surgeries are also beamed around the world via our telehealth platform, Cybersight. This allows eye teams from all across the globe to watch and participate in real-time, expanding the impact of our work further than ever before.

There are 400,000 adults and 23,000 children in Vietnam who are blind - 75% of whom simply don't need to be. 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 with only 15 ophthalmologists per million people.

But with the help of our supporters, partners and Volunteer Faculty we can help build a brighter future for Vietnam, and give generations to come the opportunity to see the world around them.

Donate today

and help our Flying Eye Hospital provide vital training to eye care teams aroud the world

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