Vital vitamin saves sight for Nigeria's children in need

Without enough Vitamin A, up to half a million children go blind each year.

About the project

Children in Nigeria will get vital help to save their eyesight – through our project to deliver vitamin A to more than a million children in seven countries across Africa and Asia.

With our partners Helen Keller International (HKI), Nigeria’s Ministry of Health and local partners, we are providing Vitamin A supplements in three target states with limited resources and multiple health issues – Adamawa, Akwa-Ibom and Borno.

Up to half a million children go blind every year in developing countries – where vitamin A deficiency is the leading cause of childhood blindness. Around 70% of them will die within one year of becoming blind.

We can reduce the mortality of young children under five by up to 34%, just by giving them enough vitamin A. The vitamin helps keep the eye moist and healthy, and supports growth and development of a healthy immune system.

Worldwide, 127 million pre-school children and seven million pregnant women in the developing world suffer from vitamin A deficiency.

Blindness in children is thought to be responsible for about one third of the total economic cost of blindness.

Our work in Nigeria will also integrate community-directed treatment with ivermectin for onchocerciasis (or river blindness), and a range of wider child-survival measures.

By the end of the project we aim to have:

  • Provided 1.22 million children with vitamin A, each year for 3 years
  • Supplied sustained vitamin A supplementation twice-yearly for children aged 6-59 months
  • Helped children in seven countries: Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia, Nepal, the Philippines, Nigeria and Sierra Leone.
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“The Seeing is Believing project will allow HKI to combat vitamin A deficiency …in targeted areas in seven countries in Africa and Asia with the greatest unmet need.”
Kathy Spahn, President, HKI
2007 - 2009
Kathy Spahn, President, HKI