Blindness in Cambodia
Cambodia is located in Southeast Asia, bordering Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam. Much of Cambodia’s medical infrastructure was destroyed during the devastating rule of the Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979. In the years that followed, Cambodia, in conjunction with international NGOs, worked to rebuild and provide medical care throughout the country.
Despite the Cambodian government’s best efforts, there are only 38 ophthalmologists for a population of 15 million, leaving over 40,000 who are completely blind. Additionally, another 57,857 Cambodians suffer from severe visual impairments.
Cambodians over the age of 50 are especially likely to be blind. The prevalence of blindness in that segment of the population is as high as 2.8 percent, compared with 0.38 percent in the general population. The leading cause of blindness in the country is cataracts, which are preventable and easily reversible with a low-cost, thirty-minute surgery.