You Can Empower Women and Girls to Access Eye Care
There are more females than males with vision loss in every category of vision impairment and blindness. Women are 12% more likely to have vision loss than men.
Since 1982, Seva has helped more than 5 million people see again.
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Even though men and women lose their vision at nearly the same rate, men access eye health services more than women. This disparity is especially stark in children, where girls make up 2 out of 3 cases of treatable blindness and vision loss.
In many countries, women and girls face significant barriers to eye care, including lack of education, limited household decision-making power, fewer financial resources, and cultural restrictions on travelling alone. Families frequently give preferential treatment to male children, making them more likely to receive eye care. Girls often face the additional barrier of being too young to advocate for themselves.
Leading the Way in Gender Equity in Eye Care
Seva Canada, in collaboration with our partner in Africa, KCCO, identified the gender inequity in blindness treatment through original research, leading to a global shift in how eye health organisations collect and use gender data.
Improving gender data collection with our program partners helps us track service delivery to women and girls, and assess the effectiveness of interventions aimed at gender equity. Consequently, women and girls now have better access to care.
Community-based strategies often work best to ensure women and girls can get eye care. These include training outreach workers for door-to-door visits, family counselling, free transportation, and village-based Community Eye Centres.
Progress Made, But More Work Needed
Due to strategies like Seva’s, global blindness and vision loss in women has decreased by 10%. However, girls remain half as likely as boys to access eye care services. Seva Canada is now emphasizing its advocacy for girls, just as it has done, and continues to do, for women.
Girls are only 1/2 as likely as boys to receive care.
Since 1982, Seva has helped more than 5 million people see again.
Stay Connected
Get Involved
About Seva
We believe that everyone, everywhere should have the power of sight. Founded in 1982, our mission is to restore sight and prevent blindness in low- and middle-income countries.
Through our unique partnerships, we work to establish locally-managed eye care programs that will continue to serve people and communities long after our involvement is complete.