Half a billion people need reading glasses. Why can't they get them?
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If you need some reading glasses in the United States, you don't have to break the bank to pick some up. That's important for older folks who need a little extra magnification. But in some parts of the world, people who need readers don't have that privilege. Today on the show, we'll find out why that is and learn the economic solution to the reading glasses shortage.
Related episodes:
Two indicators: supply chain solutions (Apple / Spotify)
For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
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If you need some reading glasses in the United States, you don't have to break the bank to pick some up. That's important for older folks who need a little extra magnification. But in some parts of the world, people who need readers don't have that privilege. Today on the show, we'll find out why that is and learn the economic solution to the reading glasses shortage.
Related episodes:
Two indicators: supply chain solutions (Apple / Spotify)
For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter.
Transcript
SYLVIE DOUGLIS, BYLINE: NPR.
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ADRIAN MA, HOST:
It's one of those annoying facts of life that the older you get, the more often you find that your body just doesn't work like it used to. Case in point - I'm almost 40 years old, and for the past year or so, I find that just reading things has become more difficult. Like, I find myself squinting to read an article on my computer or just, like, constantly enlarging the font. And I know that this is only going to get worse in the coming years. And the fact of this would be personally and professionally devastating if the solution were not extremely easy and cheap to come by - reading glasses, right?
I can get reading glasses at any pharmacy or convenience store for just a few bucks. Online, I could get five pairs of reading glasses for a little more than a dollar a piece. And that's why I was super surprised to learn this statistic. According to a report by the Lancet Global Health Commission, the number of people who have unaddressed vision loss that could be solved with a simple pair of reading glasses is around 510 million. That is more than the populations of the U.S., Mexico and Canada combined. So if reading glasses are so available and cheap here in the U.S., why are so many people around the world living without them?
This is THE INDICATOR FROM PLANET MONEY. I'm Adrian Ma. And today on the show, we'll answer that question, and we'll learn the economic solution to this reading glasses shortage.
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MA: Across large parts of Asia, Africa and Latin America, unaddressed vision loss is a really common problem. And it doesn't just affect individuals. It affects economies 'cause think about it - almost any job you can name, whether it's in an office or a factory or on a farm, it requires having at least decent near vision.
PELIN MUNIS: The data shows that there's $410 billion of economic loss annually due to vision impairment and lack of access to eyeglasses, which is pretty staggering.
MA: Pelin Munis is CEO of RestoringVision. It's a nonprofit whose mission is to help address what it calls the global vision crisis. And the main thing they're trying to tackle is helping people who are experiencing near-vision loss as they age. In medical terms, this is called presbyopia.
MUNIS: Presbyopia happens usually in your 40s. But in a lot of countries, it can happen as early as in your 30s. So just when you're in your prime working years, you're going through sight loss, and that has really long-term implications.
MA: The problem is as people get older, they often are not aware that their vision is slowly getting worse. And even if they are, in many low and middle-income countries, there aren't enough eye doctors. And then on top of all that, Pelin says some people may not even realize that their vision can be fixed with something as simple as a pair of reading glasses.
MUNIS: Oftentimes, they don't know that glasses exist. In cases where they do know that glasses exist, oftentimes they're very expensive, and they're not within reach. So it could take them more than a day travel, for example, to go to a location where there are glasses, but then those won't be affordable.
MA: Think about the difference from here in the U.S., where reading glasses are super cheap, partly because they're also simpler to make than prescription eyewear. Basically, they're just little magnifying glasses that you wear on your face. But in countries where the average person has a lot less wealth than the average American, reading glasses can actually cost a lot more.
Pelin says a few years ago, RestoringVision did a study in a part of Mexico's Zacatecas state. And community leaders there told her that reading glasses cost around $20 U.S. And this is an area where the average salary is around 280 bucks a month. And so, what is the root of the problem here? Pelin says it basically boils down to this. In many places, there isn't a demand for reading glasses. And also, there isn't a supply. In other words, there isn't a market.
MUNIS: Eyeglasses have existed for over 700 years. It's the access to them that's really the challenge.
MA: So the way that RestoringVision tries to take on this problem is by tackling the demand side of the equation first. They do that by working with local NGOs and governments in dozens of countries to try and get people screened for presbyopia.
MUNIS: You could work with a community health care worker. You could work with a primary health clinic. In Peru, we have a really innovative program where when somebody goes to pick up their pension check, they can have a vision screening and get a pair of reading glasses. If they have other issues, they can get referred for more services. So a lot of the work we do, individuals will get their first pair of glasses at no cost to them, and this is where we start to see the markets.
MA: But the market isn't really working until there's supply to meet demand. You know, you have to increase the number of places that sell the product. The thing is, if you owned a little pharmacy or a shop and you never have customers coming in asking for reading glasses, you wouldn't bother to sell them. Or if you did, you would charge a lot of money for them. So Pelin says they're working on building out those supply channels and even talked with employers about the benefits of providing reading glasses for their employees.
MUNIS: By providing somebody with a pair of reading glasses in order for them to do their near-vision work for their employment purposes, you see productivity increases of up to 32%, which is pretty significant.
MA: But Pelin says making these glasses accessible to people can be made more difficult by regulations. So for example, some countries have rules restricting the marketing of medical services. That might make it more difficult for a would-be retailer to put up a sign that says, hey, reading glasses sold here. Other countries might import glasses from China but classify them as luxury goods that are subject to a tariff or import tax. And that makes it more expensive for any would-be customer to buy.
MUNIS: And then naturally, at some point, there would be a tipping point, and markets will start to develop. And that's really what we're hoping for.
MA: You're essentially, like, trying to jump-start a market that in a lot of countries doesn't really exist.
MUNIS: Correct.
MA: And the hope is eventually that market will become self-sustaining. So when people need their second, third or fourth pair, getting them won't be so difficult and expensive. Now, if you're wondering what does this market creation process look like on the ground, you could look to Nigeria. That's where Dr. Oteri Okolo lives.
OTERI OKOLO: I'm an ophthalmologist working at the Department of Public Health in Nigeria.
MA: Oteri oversees this program aimed at getting people who are living in rural areas screened for vision problems, including presbyopia. And if needed, they give them a free or low-cost pair of reading glasses. She describes this process as demand generation.
OKOLO: You can easily train just about anyone to be able to dispense the glasses, reading glasses, to the general population. You don't need, shall I say, sophisticated equipment or a sophisticated test that a trained eye care worker would have to carry out.
MA: So this program has been going on for about a year. And Oteri says at first the rollout hit an unexpected obstacle - the eye exams were taking a weirdly long time.
OKOLO: So the lines were building up, and people - the crowds, you know, are becoming uncontrollable. And when we investigated, we realized that the primary health care workers there were slow because they themselves couldn't quite see clearly.
MA: It turned out a lot of these health care workers could not see clearly because they themselves had presbyopia. They needed reading glasses, too.
OKOLO: And when they were able to get their spectacles, the queues just moved quicker. They were able to dispense those spectacles faster.
MA: Oteri says this just goes to show how reading glasses don't just benefit older folks with vision issues but also younger folks who are in their prime working years. When her program reached out to those who received glasses, they met people like Karaleen (ph).
KARALEEN ISAIAH: My name is Mrs. Karaleen Isaiah (ph). I'm from Kogi State.
MA: Karaleen works as a seamstress.
ISAIAH: And these eyeglasses that I'm wearing I've seen enormous improvements because now I can see clearly. And I even came with my needle this morning because I was not able to face my thread through my needle, while this morning I was able to.
OKOLO: We're talking about improving their earning, their potential, so they're ending more, and they're also improving their ability to thrive.
MA: For Oteri and Pelin at RestoringVision, this is a health issue, a social issue and an economic issue rolled into one. And they say it's solvable.
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MA: This episode was produced by Cooper Katz McKim, with engineering by Patrick Murray. It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Kate Concannon edits the show, and THE INDICATOR's a production of NPR.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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