[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 150 (2004), Part 7]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages 8775-8776]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




               IN SUPPORT OF THE NATIONAL VISION STRATEGY

                                 ______
                                 

                            HON. GENE GREEN

                                of texas

                    in the house of representatives

                         Thursday, May 6, 2004

  Mr. GREEN of Texas. Mr. Speaker, on behalf of the Congressional 
Vision Caucus, I rise to recognize May as Healthy Vision Month, and to 
discuss the important recommendations of the Vision Problems Action 
Plan, A National Public Health Strategy as a way to prevent blindness 
and vision loss.
  Good vision is critical to conducting activities of daily living, is 
important for language, and affects developmental learning, 
communicating, working, health and quality of life.
  Unfortunately, far too many people are at risk for losing their 
eyesight. More than 80 million Americans have a potentially blinding 
eye

[[Page 8776]]

disease, 3 million have low vision, 1.1 million are legally blind, and 
an additional 200,000 are more severely visually impaired. Despite the 
fact that half of all blindness can be prevented, far too many people 
do not access the care they need. If nothing is done, the number of 
blind and visually impaired individuals will double by 2030.
  That is why awareness, early diagnosis and prevention are so 
important. Healthy Vision Month, a component of Healthy People 2010, is 
a national eye health campaign to raise awareness about the various 
conditions that can affect eyesight and cause vision loss.
  Additionally, a coalition of leading eye health experts, including 
Prevent Blindness America, the Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention, Lighthouse International, and the American Academy of 
Ophthalmology, recently released the Vision Problems Action Plan, A 
National Public Health Strategy, to provide our nation with a framework 
for preventing vision loss. This report can be accessed at http://
www.preventblindness.org/news/releases/Action_Plan.html
  This groundbreaking study recommends that, in order to reduce the 
occurrence of vision loss and its accompanying disabilities, our nation 
must concentrate our efforts on three priority areas: prevention/public 
health, access to care and treatment including rehabilitation, and 
research.
  Our public health and prevention campaign must ensure that vision 
programs at the National Eye Institute (NEI) and Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention (CDC) have the resources they need to improve 
communication and education campaigns, increase surveillance, 
epidemiology and prevention research; and implement appropriate 
programs, policies and systems changes.
  In order to ensure access to and availability of treatment and 
rehabilitation services for individuals with vision loss, we must 
support programs at the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services 
(CMS) and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) that remove 
barriers and improve access to eye exams currently covered under 
Medicare, such as diabetic eye exams and glaucoma detection for high 
risk populations.
  We must also strengthen the Medicare program to advance coverage for 
Medicare vision rehabilitation services as provided by orientation and 
mobility specialists, rehabilitation teachers and low-vision therapists 
including in patients homes and their environment.
  Finally, we must bolster our research efforts to improve our 
understanding of the eye and visual system in health and disease, as 
well as developing the most appropriate and effective means of 
prevention, and access to treatment and rehabilitation.
  This report provides the roadmap we need to raise awareness about 
vision loss, give individuals the tools they need to prevent it, and 
give hope to the millions already suffering from vision loss that 
better treatments for can be found.
  We would like to thank all of the organizations involved in crafting 
this report, including the American Academy of Ophthalmology, the 
American Optometric Association, the Centers For Disease Control and 
Prevention, Lighthouse International, the National Alliance For Eye and 
Vision Research, the National Eye Institute (NEI) and most importantly, 
Prevent Blindness America. Prevent Blindness America should be 
commended for spearheading this effort, for bringing together these 
various groups, and for its almost century-long tradition of preventing 
vision loss.

                          ____________________