Friday, 20 January 2023

VisionSpring’s Livelihoods in Focus campaign will screen the vision of 1.05 lakh tea workers and artisans this year in Assam


       Today, VisionSpring launched Livelihoods in Focus in Assam with a commitment to screen the vision of 1.05 lakh tea workers, artisans and microentrepreneurs in 2023, and provide eyeglasses for those who need vision correction 

       The 2023 commitment will unlock $13.5 million in income earning potential for eyeglasses wearers in Assam.

       The initiative is a significant step toward the larger goal of screening 10 lakh low-income people and establishing Assam as a clear vision state.

January 20th, 2023, New Delhi – In Assam today, VisionSpring launched Livelihoods in Focus, a campaign that will unlock $13.5 million in income earning potential this year for tea garden workers, artisans and micro-entrepreneurs who gain clear vision with eyeglasses.  Through Livelihoods in Focus, VisionSpring, together with corporate, NGO and government partners, will screen the vision of 1.05 lakh people who need to see clearly to sustain their incomes. They expect 63,000 people will acquire eyeglasses in 2023 so they can see well and do well. The 2023 commitment is part of a larger aspiration to reach 10 lakh (1 million) low-income people in tea growing regions and establish Assam as a clear vision state.

VisionSpring is working as part of a collective movement to solve the problem of uncorrected blurry vision and lack of eyeglasses worldwide by 2050. Ella Gudwin, CEO of VisionSpring said: “60 crore (600 million) people in India need eyeglasses to earn, learn and drive safely. This is a solvable problem. By serving low-income workers whose occupations require clear vision, especially at near distances, we can help people maintain their livelihoods and provide for their families. Focusing on districts in Assam with large numbers of tea workers and artisans will also improve productivity in sectors responsible for a majority of the state’s GDP.”

VisionSpring celebrated the launch of the movement with an event attended by Mr. Joydeep Phukan, Principal Officer and Secretary Tea Research Association of India, Dr. Bhanu Saikia, State Programme Officer and Joint Director Health Services (Ophthalmology), Government of Assam, Mr. Harkirat Singh Sidhu, Consulting Program Coordinator India, Rainforest Alliance, Mr. Atul Singh, Vice President CSR, Emami Group among many other senior dignitaries

Anshu Taneja, VisionSpring’s Managing Director, India said: “We have witnessed first-hand a huge unmet need for eye-screening services and eyeglasses, and we know that Livelihoods in Focus in Assam will help close this gap. Everyone can play a role in solving this problem—corporates, hospitals, government agencies, and others. This is joyful work and we invite you to join us.”

Last year VisionSpring received a transformative $15 million gift from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott. VisionSpring will allocate a portion of those funds to Livelihoods in Focus, including in Assam, when matched by financial and in-kind resources contributed by the government, tea sector, and other corporate partners.

The Livelihoods in Focus builds on VisionSpring’s decade-long track record of working in the state and documented evidence of impact. A 2018 randomized control trial in Assam found that with reading glasses, tea picker’s productivity increased by 22% on average, and up to 32% for workers over the age of fifty. Early findings from another study in progress in neighboring Bangladesh shows similar rates of return on income across a wide range of rural occupations. Vision correction through eyeglasses has the potential to add as much as 6% of incremental GDP to the state’s economy.

Research also shows that eyeglasses improve quality of life, reducing depression and anxiety, and increasing involvement in religious and family life.

To date VisionSpring has carried out 82,000 vision screenings in Assam. Of people screened through their programs, 65% require eyeglasses. Of those, 75-90% are getting their first-ever pair. Till date VisionSpring has provided 236,000 eyeglasses in the state of Assam, India

VisionSpring will be expanding Livelihoods in Focus to other parts of India, as well as tea, coffee, cocoa and artisan regions of Bangladesh, Ghana, Kenya and Uganda.

About VisionSpring

VisionSpring (www.visionspring.org) is a pioneering social organization creating access to eyeglasses for low-income adults and children. Annually in India, VisionSpring supports vision screening for more than 27 lakh (2.7 million) people and corrects the vision of more than 10 lakh (1 million) people with eyeglasses. On average, 73% of VisionSpring’s participants acquire their first-ever pair of eyeglasses through the See to Earn, See to Learn, and See to be Safe programs. To date, VisionSpring has distributed more than 50 lakh (5 million) pairs of corrective eyeglasses in India, creating more than Rs. 8,100 Crore ($1.08 billion) in economic impact for low-income households.

The organization delivers on its eye health mission across 23 states, working with more than 500 hospitals/healthcare facilities and NGOs, 15 state governments and agencies, and 50 corporations/CSRs. VisionSpring has also responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with personal protective equipment, oxygen concentrators, and vaccination access and awareness.

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