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Reversing Blindness in Utah

Thousands of people in the United States suffer from unnecessary blindnessand many of them live here in Utah.
 
Funded solely by generous donors, Moran's Operation Sight Program provides sight-restoring cataract surgery to people who could not otherwise afford it. Since the program's inception in 2012, about 400 patients have received sight-restoring surgery through this program.
 
Morans model for providing care has been adopted by the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS) Foundation for their Operation Sight network. Through this low-cost model, physicians, nurses, and technicians volunteer their time to provide free surgeries to patients in need. The operating room is staffed and run as it would be on any other day, except patients are not billed for their care.
 
Many individuals with poor vision are unable to find or keep employment, and some have to rely on family members for care and transportation. Restoring their sight has a positive impact not only on their lives, but on their families lives.
Operation Sight Day
Operation Sight Day
Operation Sight Day
Operation Sight Day

The People We Serve

Each of the patients who received care had advanced cataracts in one or both eyes. Some of the patients had lost their jobs due to their poor eyesight, which resulted in the loss of insurance and necessary funds for the surgery.
 
This is exactly what happened to cement truck driver, Kevin Scow of Salt Lake City. He lost his commercial drivers license (CDL) because of a cataract in his right eye. I was completely blind in my right eye, which resulted in the loss of my job, said Scow.
 
Without a job and insurance, Scow didnt have the funds to pay for cataract surgery. He was referred to the Moran Eye Center by the Fourth Street Clinic thinking he would be required to pay and not knowing how he would do so. It was unexpected to find out I was approved for a free surgery, and Im very grateful and appreciative for this service and for everyone who volunteered their time to help with my surgery, he. It blows my mind that I can walk out of here today with my sight back. Scow is now looking forward to getting his CDL and returning to his career as a cement truck driver.

 

Robert Mulvey Im very thankful to the doctors and nurses for volunteering their time to help me. I wouldnt have been able to get this surgery otherwise, said Robert Mulvey shortly before receiving cataract surgery on both eyes.

Six years earlier, Mulvey started noticing blurriness in his vision but didnt realize how bad it was until he failed the eye exam required for a commercial drivers license. He had been working towards becoming a school bus driver, but without the correct license, he was unable to continue driving. Without a steady job and without insurance, Mulvey wasnt able to visit a doctor to receive the intervention he needed to correct his vision. Referred by the Fourth Street Clinic, Mulvey was approved for free cataract surgery for both of his eyes.

Hes now looking forward to getting back to work and being able to see clearly. As he says, I just want to walk down the street without tripping and read the menu at a fast food restaurant its the simple things in life hes most looking forward to.

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