We noticed you’re blocking ads

Thanks for visiting CRSTG | Europe Edition. Our advertisers are important supporters of this site, and content cannot be accessed if ad-blocking software is activated.

In order to avoid adverse performance issues with this site, please white list https://crstodayeurope.com in your ad blocker then refresh this page.

Need help? Click here for instructions.

Up Front | Mar 2006

Aravind Eye Care System

Developing sustainable eye care.

It gives me great pleasure to feature an article by R.D. Ravindran, MD, and R.D. Thulasiraj from the Aravind Hospital system in Tamilnadu, India, for Cataract & Refractive Surgery Today Europe’s Tackling World Blindness column. The Aravind Eye Hospital Model has proven to be one of the most effective programs for addressing the enormous backlog of blindness in India. Founded in Madurai by the charismatic Govindappa Venkataswamy, MD, who had a vision of providing quality cataract care to the masses of his country, the Aravind Hospital system has evolved into a world leader in eye care, ophthalmic education and the development of appropriate technology for cost-effective surgery. In this article, Dr. Ravindran and Mr. Thulasiraj share how the organization is now mentoring hospitals throughout the developing world.

— Geoffrey Tabin, MD, Section Editor

The Aravind Eye Care System was founded in 1976 as an 11-bed clinic in Madurai, a small town in Southern India. During the past 30 years, it has grown into a high-volume eye care provider that features a network of five hospitals with 3,400 beds; a world-renowned service-delivery model; a facility for manufacturing high-quality ophthalmic products at a low cost and an institute for teaching and training. Today at Aravind, >240,000 surgeries are completed annually, accounting for 40% of the surgeries performed in Tamilnadu, India.1 Moreover, an estimated 10% of all of the ophthalmologists practicing in India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Indonesia have undergone training at Aravind.2 The gross domestic product in India grew 8% at the end of the first quarter of the year 2005.3 India’s large population of poor, rural and illiterate individuals, however, has not benefited from this increase, and the divide between the haves and the have-nots continues to grow.

Aravind evolved out of the need for an eye care system that would be appropriate for and supported by the economic conditions in India. The system has successfully achieved full-cost recovery and sustainable high-quality care, allowing 70% of our services to be offered free of charge or at steeply subsidized rates.4 Resource utilization at Aravind is 80%, which far surpasses Vision 2020’s global estimate of 25% for the resource utilization of eye care services,5 and this rate affords the system financial sustainability. For more information on Vision 2020, please see CRSToday Europe, page 38, January/February issue. To realize our vision, one of our strategies is to share our comprehensive structural model with eye care providers in regions with similarly developing economies that stand to benefit from the implementation of such a system.

Resource Utilization and Financial Sustainability
One early obstacle we encountered in our efforts to provide the best possible cataract care equitably to all patients was the expense of IOLs. Although IOLs considerably improve visual outcomes and, consequently, patients’ satisfaction, the lenses’ high cost threatened Aravind’s ability to provide them to patients from poorer socioeconomic groups. This situation led to the creation of Aurolab (Tamil Nadu, India), a manufacturing facility that produces IOLs — and a host of other ophthalmic products such as sutures, blades and pharmaceutical agents — at a fraction of their cost in the Western world.1 We now produce PMMA lenses for 3 to 4 and foldable acrylic lenses for 18 to 20. As a result, the facility’s surgical volume increased dramatically. We now manufacture 700,000 lenses per year. When phacoemulsification became popular among paying patients, Aravind was able to offer a less expensive, manual, sutureless, small-incision technique with similar advantages to nonpaying patients from the lower socioeconomic sections.6,7

At Aravind, we have developed standardized protocols with regard to clinical procedures, administrative measures and outreach activities.8-10 Trained paramedics carry out some of the more routine and repetitive tasks such as taking various measurements, conducting diagnostic tests and preparing patients. As a result, the ophthalmologists can concentrate on clinical and surgical care. Our OR system allows the surgeon to operate continuously, alternating between two tables. Ophthalmic assistants prepare patients and have the next one draped and ready on an adjacent table, all of which facilitates the surgeon’s transition from one surgery to the next in minimal time.11 An in-house instrument maintenance program reduces any disruption of work due to malfunctioning equipment. The operational organization has enabled Aravind Eye Hospitals to host 4% to 5% of the ophthalmic procedures performed nationwide, although the facilities represent less than 1% of the country’s ophthalmic manpower.12 Having established our own protocols regarding the utilization of workers, we are now providing help for other hospitals in India and around the world so that they may improve their services and efficiency and provide high-quality care for the poor of their societies.

An Institute for Community Opthalmology

Background. The founders of Aravind strongly believe that sharing knowledge and transferring best practices through collaborative efforts is key to reaching the organization’s goal of eliminating needless blindness. The development of skilled manpower oriented to the needs of a specific community is vital in this endeavor. The aim of our community approach is to improve the ocular health of the entire society. This conceptual framework laid the foundation for the Lions Aravind Institute for Community Ophthalmology (LAICO). It essentially translates to building the capacity of eye care programs around the world, taking into consideration the underutilization of many of these facilities. Through a collaborative process, LAICO assists eye hospitals in improving the three broad dimensions described in the following sections.

Organizational capacity building. LAICO’s faculty helps hospitals’ leadership members build the overall capacity of their entire organizations by developing goals that match the need and opportunity for the delivery of eye care in their respective communities. In addition to devising strategies for meeting these goals through efficient and cost-effective systems, LAICO helps to establish concrete parameters to monitor activities and measure growth. To date, 201 eye hospitals worldwide have undergone the capacity-building process at LAICO.

Enhancing the capacity for patient care. Once basic eye care services are sustainable, hospital administrators are encouraged to focus on areas of patient care, including productivity and training needs, and on specialty services such as diabetic retinopathy or pediatric ophthalmology. The LAICO model also supports the enhancement of systems, procedures and protocols. Currently, 17 hospitals have undergone capacity building in specialty services.

Capacity building in human resource development. LAICO has created 35 structured training programs in various paramedical and management areas to build the human resources capacity to match the need and demand of partnering eye hospitals (Table 1). In addition, LAICO has established training programs at our partner institutions in an effort to relieve ophthalmologists of some of the added workload caused by the lack of trained medical personnel. An optical-dispensing training program now exists in Dhaka, and instrument-maintenance training centers have been established in Vietnam, Nigeria and Kenya.

The Collaborative Process
Hospitals that offer free or subsidized eye care often depend on a steady stream of money from funding agencies and tend to set their targeted surgical volume according to how many patients they can afford to treat, rather than the actual need for various services. Our LAICO program helps build the needed capacity via a three-phased process. First, the LAICO representatives conduct a needs-assessment visit. Next, a multidisciplinary team from the hospital (composed of the chairman, the administrator, the chief ophthalmologist and a senior paramedic) attends a 6-day workshop at LAICO to learn improved strategies for delivering care. The workshop provides an environment in which the team members can create a vision for their hospital and develop various strategies by which to translate this vision into a reality. Finally, after allowing the hospitals a period of 6 months to implement the new strategies, the LAICO team makes follow-up visits.

Making an Impact
The positive results of LAICO’s efforts to promote and cultivate community ophthalmic systems are clearly evident. Prior to LAICO’s involvement, a hospital in Chitrakoot, Northern India, averaged 20,000 to 25,000 surgeries per year. Ninety percent of these procedures were completed during a 3-month period, with the participation of many volunteer ophthalmologists and nurses. Non-IOL surgeries accounted for 70% to 80% of the cases. Since LAICO’s input, the hospital averages 48,000 surgeries per year, all with IOLs. This 92% increase in total surgical volume was achieved without any extra major investment. Another hospital in Blantyre, Malawi, showed an even more remarkable impact: a 142% increase in its surgical volume only 1 year after the capacity-building process was initiated. Table 2 shows the cumulative impact of the capacity-building exercises among 40 partner hospitals.

Over the past 30 years, the Aravind system has developed from a single hospital in Southern India into a leader in eye care delivery, education, ophthalmic product development, and international capacity building. For more information, please visit our Web site at www.aravind.org.

Geoffrey Tabin, MD, is professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences and director of international ophthalmology at the John A. Moran Eye Center at the University of Utah. He is also the codirector of the Himalayan Cataract Project. Dr. Tabin may be reached at geoffrey.tabin@hsc.utah.edu or +1 801 581 2352.
R.D. Ravindran, MD, is professor of ophthalmology and chief medical officer at Aravind Eye Hospital in Pondicherry, India. Dr. Ravindran may be reached at rdr@pondy.aravind.org or +91 41 3261 9100.

R.D. Thulasiraj is executive director of the Lion’s Aravind Institute of Community Ophthalmology in Madurai, India. Mr. Thulasiraj may be reached at thulsi@aravind.org or +91 45 2535 6100.

Chang DF. Tackling the greatest challenge in cataract surgery (editorial). Br J Ophthalmol. 2005;89:1073-1077.

World Health Organization. Internal statistics on the number of ophthalmologists trained at Aravind. Available at: http://www.who.int/pbd/blindness/vision_2020/v2020_data_seasia_aug05.pdf. Accessed February 14, 2006.

Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry. Statistics on the economy of India. Available at: http://www.indiainbusiness.nic.in/business-climate/eco-trends.htm. Accessed February 14, 2006.

Rangan VK. The Aravind Eye Hospital, Madurai, India: in service for sight. Harvard Business Review [serial online]. April 1993; case no. 9-593-098.

World Health Organization. Global Initiative for the Elimination of Avoidable Blindness. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1997. WHO/PBL/97.61.

Natchiar G, DabralKar T. Manual small incision suture less cataract surgery–an alternative technique to instrumental phacoemulsification. Operative Techniques Cataract Refract Surg. 2000;3:161-170.

Muralikrishnan R, Venkatesh R, Prajna NV, Frick KD. Economic cost of cataract surgery procedures in an established eye care centre in Southern India. Ophthalmic Epidemiol. 2004;11:369-380.

Natchiar G, Robin AL, Thulasiraj R, et al. Attacking the backlog of India’s curable blind; the Aravind Eye Hospital model. Arch Ophthalmol. 1994;112:987-993.

Thulasiraj RD. Quality Cataract Surgery Series: Management Principles and Practices for High Quality, Large Volume, Sustainable Cataract Surgery Programmes. Madurai, India: Aravind Eye Hospitals & Postgraduate Institute of Ophthalmology, Lions Aravind Institute of Community Ophthalmology, and Seva Foundation; 2001; Module No. 4.

Meenakshi Sundaram R. Quality Cataract Surgery Series: Community Outreach and Initiatives for High Quality, Large Volume, Sustainable Cataract Surgery Programmes. Madurai, India: Aravind Eye Hospitals & Postgraduate Institute of Ophthalmology, Lions Aravind Institute of Community Ophthalmology, and Seva Foundation; 2001: Module No. 5.

Chang DF. A 5-minute, $15 cure for blindness. Cataract & Refractive Surgery Today. 2005;5:10:49-51.

Prahala CK. The Aravind eye care system: delivering the most precious gift. In: The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid—Eradicating Poverty Through Profits. Philadelphia, PA: Wharton School Publishing/Pearson; 2005: 265-286.

Mar 2006