There are currently an estimated 15 million blind people in India.
6.8 million
of these suffer from corneal blindness with vision less
than
6/60 in at least one eye,
and of these, about 1 million have
bilateral
corneal blindness. If the present trend
continues, it is expected
that
the number of corneally blind individuals in India
will increase to
8.4
million in 2010 and 10.6 million by 2020.
Of these at least 3 million can be benefited by corneal
transplantation.
Thus, to effectively meet the ever growing demand,
we
need around 150,000
corneal transplants to be performed every
year.
The C U Shah Eye Bank started functioning in Sankara Nethralaya from September 1979. The department of Medical Sociology was established in 1990 with the aim of promoting awareness on eye donation by educating and motivating the public for this noble cause. The C U Shah Eye Bank, over the last 30 years, has seen a tremendous increase in the number of eye donations. From a mere 8 eyes in 1980, 1204 eyes were collected in 2017.
Exclusive Facilities:
A suitable patient is called upon and corneal transplantation surgery is performed as early as possible.
The cornea is the clear, transparent layer in front of the "black portion" of the eye. It is also the main focusing surface, which converges light rays as they enter the eye to focus on the retina. It is, therefore, the most important part of the optical apparatus of the eye. Loss of transparency directly results in loss of vision.
A Corneal transplant is a surgery through which the opaque cornea is replaced with a clear cornea obtained from a human donor eye.
Practically anybody from the age of 1 year. There is no upper age limit. People who wear spectacles, who have undergone cataract surgery, diabetics and those who have hypertension can donate their eyes. People blind from retinal or optic nerve disease can also donate their eyes.
The ultimate decision about usage for transplantation will be made after evaluation.
Yes.
Motivate the next of kin of the deceased person to donate their eyes. Eyes need to be collected within 6 hours of death so call your nearest eye bank at the earliest. You are authorized to donate the eyes of your beloved relatives at the time of their death, even if a pledge for donation has not been made earlier by the deceased.
A call for donating eyes sets in motion the Eye Bank machinery and a team is dispatched within 15 minutes. At the site, the eyes of the deceased are enucleated without causing any disfigurement. This procedure takes about 10-15 minutes.
No. Only the cornea and sclera can be transplanted. However, the entire eyeball is enucleated, to enable the corneo-scleral disc to be fashioned surgically in a sterile environment.
No
No. The gift of sight is made anonymously.
Yes, a dedicated special phone: 044 28281919 and 044 28271616
Motivate and educate others about eye donation
In case any death incidents; motivate the next of kin of the deceased person to donate their eyes. Call your nearest eye bank.
For emergencies, more details and making your eye donation pledge, please contact:
Eye Bank, Sankara Nethralaya,
Jagadguru Kanchi Sri Chandrasekarendra Saraswathi
Nethra Nilayam (JKCN Complex) (HTP Block 5th floor)
No. 21, Dr.S.S.Badrinath Road
Chennai 600 006, Tamil Nadu, India.
Phone: 044 28281919 , 044 42271830, 044 28226694.
Email: eyebank@snmail.org