Skip to content
Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care

Cataract treatment among most effective disease interventions: new study

The Fred Hollows Foundation 2 mins read

New research by the Fred Hollows Foundation has found cataract surgery provides one of the largest investment returns of any disease intervention, bolstering calls for greater spending on global eye health aid.

The analysis with Victoria University found that, on average, every dollar invested in cataract treatment returns $20.50 USD.

 

Cataract surgery can provide more than double the return on investment compared to programs aimed at cardiovascular disease, adolescent health, and maternal and child health, the study also found.

 

It examined 19 countries across Oceania, Asia, North and Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East that collectively account for nearly 40% of the global disease burden from common eye problems.

 

It also reveals that every dollar invested in tackling the two leading causes of blindness globally,  cataract and refractive error, delivers an economic return of $9.40 USD.

 

“The findings bolster the case for greater collective investment from government, non-government, philanthropy and the private sector to meet the 2030 global eye care targets,” Fred Hollows Foundation Senior Global Health Economist Jack Hennessy said.

 

“This research is a key step forward in our efforts to end avoidable blindness – showing the way forward for greater investment in eye health programs.

 

“This requires an urgent multi-sector approach – across government, non-government, philanthropy and the private sector – re-doubling efforts to scale up programs to treat cataract and refractive error.”

 

Fast facts:

- Globally, 43 million people around the world are blind and at least 1 billion people have untreated or preventable vision impairment.

- World Health Organisation 2030 eye health targets – a 40% increase in refractive error coverage and 30% increase in cataract surgery coverage – are in danger of being missed without greater global investment.

- Without urgent action, 1.7 billion people are forecast to be living with avoidable vision impairment by 2050.

- Every $1 USD invested in treating cataract delivers an economic return of $20.50 USD.

- Every $1 USD invested in treating myopia delivers an economic return of $10.80 USD.

- Every $1 USD invested in treating presbyopia delivers an economic return of $8 USD.

- Every $1 USD invested in tackling the world's two leading causes of blindness delivers an economic return of $9.40 USD.

Interview opportunities:

- Fred Hollows Foundation Senior Global Health Economist Jack Hennessy

- Fred Hollows Foundation Optometry and Primary Care Adviser Dr May Ho about the difference this surgery makes to individuals and their communities

 

Contact details:

Georgie Moore
0477 779 928

Media

More from this category

  • General News, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 14:07
Parliament of Australia

Public hearing concerning the National Redress Scheme

TheJoint Standing Committee on Implementation of the National Redress Schemewill hold a public hearing in Canberra on Friday, 13 March 2026, for itsinquiry into the continuing operation of the Scheme. Committee Chair, Ms Jodie Belyea MP, said the Committee is grateful for the contributions made in support of the inquiry to date. ‘The National Redress Scheme plays a central role in Australia’s response to institutional child sexual abuse. It is an important program for a significant number of people. The Committee has received a substantial number of submissions in support of our current inquiry, and public hearings over the coming…

  • Energy, Government Federal
  • 12/03/2026
  • 14:00
Rewiring Australia

BULLI MEDIA ALERT: Federal MPs welcome expansion of home electrification pilot

MEDIA ALERT: Federal MPs welcome expansion of home electrification pilot Who: Assistant Minister for Energy, Josh Wilson MP, Member for Fremantle Ms Alison Byrnes MP, Member for Cunningham Dr. Saul Griffith, Co-founder and Chief Scientist, Rewiring Australia Jennifer Macey (householder) What: Doorstop with opportunity for interviews When: Friday 13 March, 3pm Where: 11 Beattie Ave, Bulli, NSW The Story: Bulli locals can now team up with their neighbours to cut power bills and modernise their homes as part of an expansion to an ambitious community-driven electrification push underway in the NSW Illawarra led by Rewiring Australia. Households in the 2515…

  • Energy, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 12:11
Sweltering Cities

The cost of keeping cool is making Australians sick: New report reveals millions forced to ration cooling during record heat

12 March 2026 Sweltering Cities has today released the findings of its 2026 Summer Survey, exposing a national health crisis driven by the rising cost of keeping cool. With data from more than 2,600 respondents across 766 postcodes, the report proves that for many Australians the high cost of staying cool is having serious physical and mental health impacts. The 2025/26 summer saw 68% of all respondents report feeling unwell due to heat. However, the survey reveals that this burden is falling most heavily on those already struggling with the cost of living. For renters and people with disabilities, the…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.