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Fred Hollows makes 1 million people see in a year

The Fred Hollows Foundation has reached a remarkable record with over one million eye operations and treatments achieved in just one year, for the first time in its history.

“Performing one million eye operations and treatments in a single year is an important milestone and one I am incredibly proud of,” says Brian Doolan, Chief Executive Officer, The Fred Hollows Foundation.

“We are now so much closer to our goal of ending avoidable blindness.”

Occurring over 20 years after his death, it is a result that Fred Hollows himself would have been immensely proud of achieving.

“Fred would never have imagined The Foundation would grow to achieve so much and transform the lives of so many millions of people in the world’s poorest communities,” says Gabi Hollows, Founding Director of The Fred Hollows Foundation.

With The Foundation’s eye care specialists performing over 1,004,975 operations and treatments in 2016, the charity has seen more than a 10 per cent increase than on the previous year.

These included 147,000 sight-restoring or sight-saving cataract operations, performed in some of the poorest communities around the globe.

“Fred fought tirelessly for a world where no one is needlessly blind,” says Andrew Bell, Executive Director of The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ. “Reaching over one million operations and treatments in a single year is a tribute to the global organisation and its commitment to Fred’s unstoppable nature.

A nature that inspired a new generation to carry on his sight-restoring work – with these sorts of staggering results.”

25 years ago, The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ was established and initially raised money to support the global organisation, who work to end avoidable blindness in over 25 countries around the world.

Then, in 2002, the NZ Foundation began restoring sight and training eye health workers in the Pacific Islands, Papua New Guinea and Timor-Leste, where four out of five people who are blind don’t need to be. Continue reading

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