We are passionate about ending preventable blindness by training eye care specialists to provide high-quality eye care in Afghanistan.
Since 1966, IAM’s National Organisation for Ophthalmic Rehabilitation (NOOR) has been improving eye care services in Afghanistan, enabling more people to access affordable, high-quality eye care.
Why eye care?
Losing your eyesight completely changes your life. The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that 1.5 million people in Afghanistan are visually impaired and 400,000 people are blind. WHO also estimates that the vast majority of this blindness (80%) could be prevented.
Through NOOR, people who thought they were permanently blind are getting their sight back.
What do we do?
Training
Our primary goal is to increase the skills and capacity of eye care professionals across Afghanistan – providing well-trained eye care specialists to serve the country’s people. Through the NOOR Eye Care Training Centre, we run training programmes for ophthalmologists and ophthalmic technicians.
Service delivery
For more than 50 years, we have been partnering with the Government of Afghanistan’s Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) to support eye care facilities across the country.
NOOR runs three referral hospitals: the NOOR Eye Care Training Centre in Kabul, Mazar Ophthalmic Centre, and Kandahar NOOR Eye Hospital. We also provide logistical and financial oversight to the MoPH’s Central Polyclinic and Herat Ophthalmic Centre (both originally founded by IAM).
In 2017, NOOR also established eight new Vision Centres, enabling people in remote areas of Afghanistan to access eye care in their own communities for the first time.
Production of eye care products
NOOR is also a producer of a variety of quality eye care products, and has become known as a trusted brand throughout Afghanistan.
What difference is IAM eye care work making?
The blind see
Abdul* lost one of his eyes 30 years ago, and had barely any vision left due to a mature cataract in his remaining eye. When he came to Kandahar NOOR Eye Hospital, the doctor identified the problem and referred him for cataract surgery.
“I was very nervous and was thinking I might lose my one remaining eye,” Abdul says. But, knowing it was his only chance at restoring his vision, Abdul agreed to the surgery.
“The following morning, the ward nurse removed the patch from my eye, and what a difference it made! I could see clearly,” he says.
“I didn’t believe that a time would come when I would be able to see everything clearer and brighter.”
*name changed
Read more about the amazing difference IAM’s eye care work is making to people’s lives by clicking on the stories below.
Posts about Eye Care 29
Khalid used to struggle to see clearly and suffer with headaches. Now, he is the Head Pharmacist for IAM’s National Organisation for Ophthalmic Rehabilitation (NOOR), helping other people with poor […]
Fatima was almost blind when she came to the IAM eye hospital in Kandahar, Afghanistan. Now she can see again! Find out how…
Across Afghanistan, our NOOR eye care programme is well known for quality eye care–but there is a lot more to NOOR than that. Check out our new NOOR infographic to learn all about the programme, our aim, and why it matters.
A Posture of Learning Through Our Training Programmes IAM’s National Organisation for Ophthalmic Rehabilitation (NOOR) is known throughout Afghanistan for providing high-quality eye care to Afghans. We provide service delivery […]
Celebrating World Sight Day On October 11, our NOOR Eye Care Programme took part in celebrating the 2018 World Sight Day. World Sight Day is an annual day of awareness […]
Avastin Injections: Doctors Trained in New Techniques Our NOOR Eye Care facilities are busy places–just last year, we distributed 25,988 pairs of glasses, saw 199,877 patients, and performed 10,566 surgeries. […]
Meet Ali, who was told his poor vision was not treatable. Ali came with his father to one of our NOOR Eye Clinics. There, his father explained that Ali had […]
Gulla Mez had been performing all of her responsibilities from memory for the last two years. Although she was only 30 years old, Gulla Mez hadn’t been able to see […]
Meet Zamarod, the daughter of Abdul Ghani. She lives with her disabled son and is 55 years old. She has suffered a lot of problems with the sight in both […]
This July, at 65 years old, a woman came to the hospital with cataracts on both eyes; she only had finger-counting vision. This is her story. Before her vision declined, […]