January 01, 2025 05:33 am (IST)
Follow us:
facebook-white sharing button
twitter-white sharing button
instagram-white sharing button
youtube-white sharing button
Indian-origin doctor among 2 killed in UAE light aircraft crash | 'We will take revenge, with interest:' Suvendu Adhikari warns Mamata Banerjee over her Sandeshkhali claims | 'Forgive and forget mistake': Manipur CM N Biren Singh apologises for ethnic clashes | Deeply malicious and utterly condemnable: Pinarayi Vijayan on BJP leader Nitesh Rane's 'Kerala is mini Pakistan' remark | Rohit Sharma to quit Test cricket after Border Gavaskar Trophy in Sydney: Report | Yemen approves death sentence for Indian nurse, MEA responds | Truth ultimately gets revealed: Mamata Banerjee in her first visit to Sandeshkhali after Lok Sabha polls | ISRO launches SpaDeX mission aimed for 'in-space docking' | 'Law is equal for all': Pawan Kayan on Allu Arjun's arrest in theatre stampede case | Highly objectionable and I was hurt that Arvind Kejriwal called Atishi temporary: Lt Governor

India has eliminated Trachoma as a public health problem in 2024, declares WHO

Oct 09, 2024, at 02:35 pm

World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared that the Government of India has eliminated Trachoma as a public health problem becoming the third country in the South-East Asia Region to achieve this milestone.

New study confirms Mediterranean diet prevents a leading cause of blindness

Oct 02, 2018, at 03:19 pm

New York, Oct 2 (IBNS): Evidence is mounting that a poor diet plays an important role in the development of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a leading cause of blindness in the United States. A large collaboration of researchers from the European Union investigating the connection between genes and lifestyle on the development of AMD has found that people who adhered to a Mediterranean diet cut their risk of late-stage AMD by 41 percent.

Cases of blindness to rise to 115 million by 2050, finds study

Aug 05, 2017, at 02:14 am

London, Aug 4 (IBNS):The number of cases of blindness is predicted to rise to 115 million by 2050, according to new research published in The Lancet Global Health.