Israel leads the world in blindness prevention
Advancing eye care
The surprising results of the study were revealed when Belkin was researching a broader topic. “I was trying to show that over the last 100 years there was no change in the rate of blindness from glaucoma in the world, which is probably true in many places,” Belkin tells ISRAEL21c.
But when he and fellow researchers Alon Skaat, Angela Chetrit and Ofra Kalter-Leibovici looked specifically at Israeli statistics over the last 12 years, they discovered that although rates of untreatable genetic causes of blindness remained steady over that time period, rates of preventable blindness were reduced by more than 56%. This was not true of any other country. “There is nothing anywhere else remotely like we have here in Israel,” he says.
In fact, in the same issue of the American Journal of Ophthalmology was a report from Denmark — which also has socialized medicine and high standards of care – showing a decline only in age-related macular degeneration. Belkin speculates that one of the key differences could be that Israelis tend to adhere to recommended treatment regimens more closely than patients in other countries. This phenomenon has been shown in relation to other diseases but hasn’t yet been proven in ophthalmology.
The doctor notes that policy also plays a role. Since the 1990s, Israeli patients have been able to choose their doctors privately for cataract surgery. This practically eliminates wait times for surgery and prevents the condition from growing worse over the long term.
Abigail Klein Leichman