Public-private Collaboration Crucial To Ensuring Quality, Accessible Eye Care
KUALA LUMPUR, April 26 (Bernama) -- The responsibility of safeguarding Malaysia's eye care is a shared endeavour, said Bandar Tun Razak member of parliament Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.
The wife of the Prime Minister said both public and private hospitals play a crucial role as caretakers of eye health, ensuring that quality eye care is accessible to all.
'This collective effort strengthens our ability to provide world-class ophthalmology services, bridging gaps in accessibility and bringing vision care closer to communities in need,' she said when officiating the Malaysian Ophthalmology Scientific Congress (MOSC) 2025 here today.
Noting that Malaysia has achieved a significant milestone in ophthalmology practice, Wan Azizah said the National Eye Survey III, conducted in 2023, reported a dramatic reduction in the prevalence of blindness in earmarked regions across the country.
She said the survey recorded a decrease from 1.6 per cent to 0.8 per cent in the eastern regions, and from 2.1 per cent to 0.6 per cent in Sarawak, reflecting the nation's progress in enhancing eye care services.
'It is truly impressive to see progress in achievements and advancements in this field spearheaded by the young of today, a testament to the power of innovation, determination and community-focused care,' she said.
The former deputy prime minister said the National Eye Database (NED), established in 2002, has been instrumental in this journey, empowering ophthalmologists to make evidence-based decisions that continually improve patient outcomes.
Wan Azizah said the data-driven approach earned Malaysia the honour of hosting the World Health Organisation/ International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB) meeting on cataract surgery outcomes in 2018, describing it as a proud moment that highlighted the country's leadership in global eye care standards.
On the MOSC, she said the three-day congress, themed "United We Stand: One Vision for Malaysia," which began yesterday, brings together a distinguished assembly of professionals from both public and private healthcare sectors to share knowledge and discuss strategies to improve the future of eye care in Malaysia.
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New Straits Times
3 hours ago
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The Star
6 hours ago
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After the devastating 2018 floods in Kerala, they were also at the forefront of preventing rampant waterborne diseases. The health workers' grievances of poor pay and lack of respect stand at odds with Kerala's highly reputed public health system, which has achieved better disease control and maternal mortality and immunisation rates than most other states. Studies credit these healthcare triumphs to decentralised governance and the community engagement by more than 26,000 grassroots health workers. The Indian government defines Asha work under a national programme as voluntary, and the workers' payment an honorarium, not a wage. The workers are paid largely by the local state governments, with each state setting its own honorarium. When the Asha programme was launched in 2005, the honorarium nationwide was 500 rupees (US$5.83) a month. In Kerala, it has been gradually increased in response to protests every few years, up to 7,000 rupees a month since 2024. 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He also argued that Kerala paid the honorariums more regularly than other states that promised more, but Ashas have refuted this claim, saying they sometimes do not get paid for over three months. Rosy, struggling to repay loans she took to send her two daughters to college, was enraged by what she called 'the government's cruel excuses'. 'Amid this financial crunch, how come the Kerala government has 100 crore (one billion) rupees to celebrate its fourth anniversary, but does not give us 100 rupees more?' she asked. The cost of living in Kerala is higher than the national average. Some estimates put average monthly expenses excluding rent at more than 27,000 rupees per month. Almost all Ashas in Kerala are from low-income families, and three-quarters are sole breadwinners while a quarter are Dalits, who are at the bottom of India's caste hierarchy, said feminist scholar J. Devika, who conducted spot surveys of striking health workers. 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The Star
9 hours ago
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Act now or face vaping fallout, say health experts
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