📰 Full Story
More than 94 million people worldwide need cataract surgery but roughly half lack access to treatment, the World Health Organization said on Feb. 11, 2026, as it released new guidance on expanding quality cataract services.
Cataract remains the leading cause of blindness and a major cause of vision impairment; surgery is a short, cost-effective procedure (about 15 minutes; intraocular lens cost can be under US$100). WHO and a new Lancet analysis—using Rapid Assessment of Avoidable Blindness and other population surveys across 68 countries with modelled trends to 2030—show large unmet need, worst in Africa where three in four people remain untreated.
The WHO-backed modelling projects cataract surgical coverage will rise by only about 8.4% this decade, far short of the 30 percentage-point eCSC target set by member states for 2030.
Women have consistently lower access than men, and in some settings, notably Kenya, current rates mean many patients will die with cataract-related blindness.
WHO urges integration of eye care into primary health services, investment in equipment and financing, and scale-up of standardised surgeon training and workforce distribution.
🔗 Based On
The Straits Times (ST) - World94 million need cataract surgery, but access lacking: WHO

















:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(834x260:836x262)/christina-applegate-060425-b649d2a0561645f7b40462e53dda8c55.jpg)

💬 Commentary