Unilorin don develops blindness detection kits

Mon, May 13, 2019 | By publisher


Health

Dupe Ademola-Popoola, an associate professor of Ophthalmology at the College of Health Sciences, University of Ilorin, has been granted patent on a device, Teacher Led Vision Screener, TELVIS.

According to the University of Ilorin Bulletin issued on Monday, TELVIS helps detect sight challenges in children and young people

It further explained that the device could be used by non-professionals, particularly teachers, to detect sight inadequacies among pupils.

The report disclosed that the ophthalmologist also invented another device known as “Vision Save.’

It said that Vision Save was particularly useful in the course of immunisation of children between ages zero and two.

The device, it added, would be good for schools for special needs to address further complications that were usually suffered by blind pupils

The bulletin quoted Ademola-Popoola as commending the United States Agency for International Development, USAID, for granting her financial support in the production and deployment of the two devices.

It added that the agency also offered support in the training of non-professionals on simple rules in using the devices effectively.

According to the bulletin, Ademola-Popoola, praised the authorities of the university and the Tertiary Education Trust Fund, TETFUND, for assisting her research team with a grant.

It added that the university and TETFUND also trained key informants in various communities with a view to finding-out those who had eye problems and providing treatment for the identified ones at minimum cost.

“The University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, UITH, Eye Clinic is among the leading centres offering quality services in Nigeria.

“The latest effort is expected to cover over 200,000 children of the university’s primary catchment areas.

“It is intended to enable the ordinary people benefit more from experts in order to bridge the gap between the town and the community,” it said.

The publication enumerated some of the challenges facing the war against blindness in children to include ignorance and paucity of funds.

It said that it was important for professionals of related disciplines to develop inter-disciplinary approaches in the development of skills, devices and technologies that could be used to address human challenges.

“Research has shown that most of the cases of childhood blindness are caused by communal and parental neglect.

“The neglect is usually before a woman conceives or during the pregnancy, this is as a result of omission of certain precautionary procedure, most especially on the part of mothers.

“80 percent of learning comes from vision, once any young one loses his or her sight the existence of such person will be negatively impacted.

“When vision is good, your future will be good; anyone with perfectly working eyes is more likely to live a more accomplished life than someone who does not,’’ it said. (NAN)

May 13, 2019 @ 14:30 GMT|

Tags:


Only 16.2% of health facilities provide TB services- survey

THE 2023 National Health Facility Survey (NHFS) has revealed that only 16.2 per cent of health facilities across Nigeria are...

Read More
Gavi concludes agreements to facilitate donations of 305,000 mpox vaccine doses on behalf of US, with the first delivery to Nigeria 

A shipment of 11,200 doses, donated by the United States of America and facilitated by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, have...

Read More
NAFDAC busts Rice repackaging factory in Nasarawa

THE National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) on Thursday raided a rice-repackaging factory in New Karu,...

Read More