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According the World Health Organization, 37 million people worldwide are blind and an additional 127 million have vision so poor that normal life is impossible. A staggering 90 percent of the world’s blind live in developing countries and for 28 million of them, their blindness could have been prevented, or their eyesight restored, if only they had access to proper eye care.
In the mid-1970’s, a Houston-based ophthalmologist, Oliver Foot, decided to do something about it. And with the help of some of Corporate America’s most legendary titans--a past-its-prime DC-8, and a handful of volunteering medical professionals--he created Orbis International, a nonprofit on a mission to eliminate avoidable blindness and restore sight in the developing world.
The ORBIS Flying Eye Hospital is literally a hospital with wings that took flight after extensive modification to the passenger area and cargo bay of a DC-10 jet aircraft. This unique mobile teaching facility brings together dedicated eye care professionals and aviators to transport the gift of sight around the world.
On board, local doctors, nurses and technicians work alongside ORBIS’s international medical team in the operating, laser treatment, and recovery rooms to exchange knowledge and improve their ability to preserve and restore sight.
Since its launch in 1982, Orbis has provided training programs to more than 124,000 doctors, nurses, and other essential healthcare workers in 85 countries; performed more than 135,000 eye surgeries; and directly treated more than 3 million individuals. In addition, it’s been estimated that as many as 27.5 million children and adults have benefited from Orbis International’s medical training programs worldwide.
Oliver Foot was born in Kingston, Jamaica in 1946 and was educated in the United States at New York University and Goddard College. He joined ORBIS as executive director in 1982 and was appointed President in 1987. In addition to serving as Chairman of the ORBIS UK Board of Trustees, he also sits on the boards of ORBIS International, ORBIS Canada and ORBIS Taiwan.
Oliver has led the ORBIS team of volunteer doctors, nurses and aviators to more than 80 countries across the world. During this time, ORBIS has received endorsements from three United Nations secretary-generals and from many heads of state, including President George Bush Sr., President Bill Clinton, Emperor Akio Hito of Japan, President Fidel Castro of Cuba, King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, President Abdul Kalam of India, and President Jiang Zemin of China. Oliver has been responsible for raising more than $200 million in North America, the UK, the Middle East and Hong Kong to fund the humanitarian work of ORBIS, which is carried out through the world’s only flying eye hospital and in numerous programmes across the world.
Oliver said: "It is a privilege to have played a part in ORBIS since its inception - not only because ORBIS has been highly effective in preventing blindness and restoring sight to millions, but because it is a joy working with an international team of people from more than 20 different countries as one family, helping those who are suffering needlessly. To me, ORBIS is at the heart of what life is all about. Promoting cooperation and understanding through serving others - what better way could there be to help to heal our divided world?"
This free podcast is from our Globeshakers series.
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