Global Ophthalmology Program
We offer a one-year post-graduate clinical training subspecialty in global medicine, certified through the Association of University Professors of Ophthalmology. Fellows spend two-thirds of the year working in Asia or Africa, alongside department faculty in collaboration with the Himalayan Cataract Project (HCP). Geoff Tabin, MD, ophthalmology professor, serves as the director for this fellowship and he is the co-founder and chairman of HCP. Please visit www.cureblindness.org for additional program information.
Contact
Samuel DeKlerk
Fellowship Coordinator, Grand Rounds Administrator
samueldk@stanford.edu
Department of Ophthalmology
Stanford University Medical Center
2452 Watson Court
Palo Alto, CA 94303
THE PROBLEM: PREVENTABLE & CURABLE BLINDNESS
The scope of worldwide blindness is daunting.
There are 39 million blind individuals worldwide, and 285 million with some form of visual impairment—and 90 percent of them live in poverty in the developing world. Up to 60 percent of blind children die within one year, and a blind adult will only live two-thirds as long as sighted peers.
Four out of every five blind person could have easily been prevented or cured at any modern eye clinic, but those in develolping nations lack access to modern eye care—sometimes due to expense, but most often because there aren’t enough doctors. While the United States has 61 ophthalmologists per million people, many developing countries have only one or two per million.
The economic impact of blindness is staggering: for every blind person, 2.5 individuals are lost from the workforce as others must stop work or school to care for their vision-impaired relatives. Lost productivity adds up to $2.7 trillion each year.*
Himalayan Cataract Project
Department Contact: Geoff Tabin, MD
· For more information on Himalayan Cataract Project, visit here
Stanford Belize Vision Clinic
Department Contact: Ann Caroline Fisher, MD
· For more information on the Stanford Belize Vision Clinic, visit here
To read our "Going global" story in our 2019 Annual Report, visit here