Saturday exhibitor
exhibit synopsis & profileFIGHT FOR SIGHT
A future everyone can see
Synopsis: Come along to our interactive stand and find out how sight loss can affect your everyday life, find your blind spot, experience what it’s like having a sight loss condition. Chat with their scientists and hear how they’re changing the future, so everyone can see.
Someone in the world goes blind every five seconds. Fight for sight’s mission is to stop sight loss in its tracks. By funding pioneering eye research.
Fight for Sight as it exists today evolved through a merger of Fight for Sight and the British Eye Research Foundation in 2005.
Fight for Sight was founded in 1965 by the UK’s first ophthalmic pathologist, Norman Ashton. Born in 1913, Ashton qualified in medicine in 1939. In 1948 he was invited to be Director of Pathology at Moorfields Eye Hospital and the newly created Institute of Ophthalmology at the University of London, a post he held for 30 years. From his lab, Ashton published over 200 papers and trained numerous ophthalmic pathologists who dispersed around the globe.
An early breakthrough
In 1953 Ashton discovered that excessive oxygen given to compensate for breathing problems associated with premature birth can cause blindness. His team’s observations led to the careful control of oxygen delivery to premature infants and saved the sight of many babies. Subsequent work supported by Fight for Sight has helped to develop techniques to salvage vision in premature babies with sight-threatening retinopathy.
Here are some of the other main events that have shaped the charity’s history, or click to visit Fight for Sight’s website.