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Kolkata eye doctor adds new stream to philately

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 17:11 -- admin

Subhra Priyadarshini; PTI; May 19, 2005

As a tribute to legends who overcame their visual impairment to make a mark in history, a Kolkata-based doctor has put together a unique collection of stamps of famous blind people, adding a new stream, ‘ophthaphilately’, to the age old hobby, according to a PTI report.

From stamps of John Milton to Galileo and J. Pulitzer to Helen Keller, Stevie Wonder, Marconi and Theodore Roosevelt, Samar K. Basak's collection is a who's who of famous blind and visually impaired personalities.

Madhya Pradesh textbooks to have a chapter on disability

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 17:11 -- admin

Natasha Chopra; Times News Network; May 2, 2005

Madhya Pradesh has become probably the first state in the country to incorporate a chapter on disability in school textbooks in all government schools. Isn’t that an example that the rest of the country should follow?

"Absolutely," says Akhil Paul, Director, SENSE International. Paul feels incorporating awareness and learning about disability at an early age is essential, "as anything in the inclusive mode has to happen early to leave an impression".

India now has school for guide dogs for the blind

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 17:08 -- admin

Eyeway News Service; June 17, 2005

There is good news for people with blindness and visual impairments. Nitin Sule, a veteran psychologist with 10 years of working in the field of HIV and two years in the field of visual impairment, has started ‘Drushti Guide Dog School for Blind’. Supported by an able staff, Mr Sule can train up to 20 dogs at a time. The recipients are selected from a list of registrants. Over the next one year, Sule plans to expand his infrastructure so that 60 dogs can be trained at a time.

Climb every mountain

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 17:07 -- admin

Mountaineer, Girl Guide, lawyer, social counsellor, negotiator, research scholar and human rights activist. Anjali Sen Gupta uncovers the many facets of Kanchan Gaba, who has been blind since childhood.

Disability sports loses a champion in Sunil Dutt

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 17:07 -- admin

Actor-filmmaker-activist-politician Sunil Dutt’s demise a week short of his 76th birthday has robbed the nation's cinema, public life and disability sports of a stellar personality.

In his death, disability sports has lost one of its most committed promoters. He was one of the first Ministers in India to take concrete steps for mainstreaming disability sports, even initiating dialogues with various organisations in his effort to see that gets disability sports its due. His absence is a major loss for disability, as also blind, sport in India.

Job Reservations for the blind

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 17:05 -- admin

It’s a tricky issue. Do job reservations compensate for the discrimination that people with visual impairments face in the working world? Or do they simply lead to complacence and non-performance? Are incentives the way to go, or do they just promote a ‘charity culture’? Are visually impaired people not capable of succeeding on their own merits? Anu Bhambhani explores the many facets of this complex issue.

By George

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 17:04 -- admin

A person’s capability to work is not dependant on his ability to see. If he cannot see, it does not automatically follow that he cannot excel at what he does.

Take Ved Mehta, for instance, or David Blunkett. The former is a successful Indian author; the latter was England’s Home Secretary. Both are visually impaired. It is important for us to note that it is the mind that drives a person to higher levels of performance.

Unite for Sight brings gift of sight around the world

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 16:23 -- admin

Sybil Blau, News-Times Correspondent

Jennifer Staple has personality and smarts, but also focussed determination and a desire to help people. She's used both attributes as president and CEO of Unite for Sight, an organisation advocating eye care and eye care education, that she founded in 2001 when she was a student at Yale University in the United States.

Scientists regenerate damaged optic nerve

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 16:23 -- admin

Health India; Washington, February 24, 2005

Scientists at Schepens Eye Research Institute in the United States have regenerated a damaged optic nerve from the eye to the brain, sparking hope for sufferers of glaucoma and spinal cord injuries. This achievement, which occurred in laboratory mice and is described in the March 1, 2005 issue of the Journal of Cell Science, holds great promise for victims of diseases that destroy the optic nerve, and for sufferers of central nervous system injuries.

Drug to combat blindness in the elderly under development

Mon, 07/30/2012 - 16:21 -- admin

Reuters, January 20, 2005

A private biotechnology company called Angiosyn, Inc., in the United States, is developing a drug for macular degeneration, the leading cause of blindness in the elderly. So far the drug has only been tested in animals.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration had, in December 2004, approved a drug for the more severe form of macular degeneration that was developed by Pfizer (which is in talks to acquire Angiosyn). Analysts estimate the drug, Macugen, could eventually generate more than $1 billion a year.

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