Corporate Partner Spotlight: Jobson Optical Group

Jobson Optical Group logo

A Megaphone for the Mission

When OGS has something to say to the optometry profession, Jobson Optical Group makes sure the profession hears it.

As the company behind some of the most trusted names in eye care media — including 20/20, Vision Monday, Vmail, Review of Optometry, Women in Optometry, Review of Myopia Management, AI in Eye Care, and Review of Optometric Business — Jobson reaches eye care professionals through the publications they already read and rely on every day.

Through a generous in-kind partnership, Jobson helps OGS stay top-of-mind across this distinguished network, fostering an ongoing presence in the publications optometrists read every day. They keep the OGS mission visible, timely, and connected to the people doing the work on the ground.

“The work of OGS is critical to bringing quality vision care to underserved communities throughout the world,” said Tom Lamond, President, Jobson Optical Group.“We’re incredibly proud and humbled to support their mission and be a part of bringing vision care to those who otherwise might go without.”

We’re deeply grateful to Jobson Optical Group for helping OGS reach the community whose generosity changes lives around the world.

PRACTICE SPOTLIGHT: Oxford Eye Clinic

Oxford Eye Clinic logo
Photos of Dr. Strickland and Dr. Wally from Oxford Eye Clinic
Collage of photos of Oxford Eye Clinic volunteering in Honduras

Twenty Years of Showing Up

Some partnerships are built in a single dramatic moment. This one was built over nearly twenty years of steady support from Oxford Eye Clinic. When we reached out for a quote, the team at Oxford Eye Clinic gave us far more than we expected — a heartfelt reflection on exactly why this work matters to them.

“At Oxford Eye Clinic, we see every day how much good vision impacts someone’s life, from a child being able to see the board at school to a grandparent driving safely again. That’s why our doctors are proud to support Optometry Giving Sight,” the practice shared.

“Good vision changes lives, and we believe eye care should be accessible to everyone, not just those who can afford it,” said Dr. William Strickland.

That belief extends well beyond their own patient base. Each year, the doctors at Oxford Eye Clinic participate in mission work in Honduras, providing care directly to communities with little access to vision services — an experience that brings their support of OGS full circle.

“We’re grateful to be part of a profession that helps people not only here at home, but around the world too,” said Dr. Ryan Wally.

We’re equally grateful for partners like Oxford Eye Clinic, whose long-standing commitment reminds us that meaningful impact is often built one year, one gift, and one mission trip at a time.

From the Field: Building the Schools That Will Outlast Us

A photo of five optometry students and a small child holding a chart, in front of a stand-up banner.
A photo of an instructor at a new School of Optometry in the developing world teaching optometry students hands-on training
A photo of three graduates from the Haiti Optometry School holding certificates, and an instructor beside them.
A photo of Umeh with a quote saying "Many Optometry Schools have limited instruments available for the students and this affects the sharpness of their clinical skills due to lack of clinical practice."

Each year, donations to Optometry Giving Sight (OGS) enable us to fund projects globally that provide immediate eyecare to those in need today, and expand optometry so vision care is available for years to come.

Building the Optometry Schools That Will Outlast Us

We’re sharing updates from five very different projects with a single throughline: the establishment and strengthening of optometry schools themselves. Spanning Nigeria, Nepal, Vietnam, and a network of Francophone countries, these stories showcase the deliberate work of building academic institutions capable of producing optometrists long after any single grant ends.

In Vietnam, the undergraduate Bachelor of Optometry program at Hanoi Medical University — supported by the Brien Holden Foundation with OGS funding — achieved formal government accreditation, establishing optometry as a recognized academic discipline for the first time in the country’s history. That accreditation has already opened the door to a new Master’s program, and it dovetails directly with a separate achievement: the Vietnamese government’s approval of an Optometrist Job Code, supported by OGS alongside our grantee partners, which allows locally trained optometrists to legally practice alongside ophthalmologists. In effect, Vietnam now has a fully recognized optometry profession built from the ground up.

The Université de Montréal/Unité de santé internationale is tackling a related but earlier-stage challenge: building optometry education from the ground up across several Francophone countries. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, a formal partnership agreement with HONU University is now signed, equipment has been delivered, and local lecturers received their first hands-on training in how to teach clinical procedures themselves. In Mali, a new director at the Institut Ophtalmologique Tropicale d’Afrique has renewed conversations about launching a Master’s program. Even in Lebanon, where geopolitical instability has paused in-person visits indefinitely, the work of building toward formal governmental recognition continues online.

Despite extraordinary circumstances, Université de Montréal/Unité de santé internationale also continues to make progress in support of the UEH School of Optometry in Haiti. Port-au-Prince remains in a state of armed conflict and institutional instability, yet the first semester of 2026 launched on schedule in February, with both external and local faculty delivering courses remotely. The final students from the 2018–2023 cohorts have begun their clinical internships at the Cathy Pearson and Fortune Previl Memorial Clinic, and discussions are underway to formally accredit a residency program there — a pathway designed to transition graduates into faculty roles at the UEH School of Optometry, building long-term teaching capacity from within.

In Nepal, the Nepal Optometry Students Society is laying a different type of foundational groundwork: a functioning optical lab. Sourcing instruments internationally has meant navigating shipping delays and import hurdles most schools never have to think about. But the lab being built will give Nepali optometry students practical training they’ve never had access to before.

Meanwhile, in Nigeria, OPTOGLOBE is approaching the same issue from the student side. Faced with a smaller grant than requested, the Equipping the Future initiative pivoted toward gathering hard data on the barriers that optometry students worldwide face in accessing the clinical instruments their education depends on. That evidence — now live on a public dashboard — is already informing advocacy efforts and earning international attention, including an invitation to present at the IAPB meeting in Nairobi.

The work continues, across different countries and different stages of development, united by the belief that a profession is only as strong as the schools that train it. This is the kind of investment OGS is proud to stand behind.

Professional Eye Care Associates of America (PECAA)

PECAA Logo

PECAA has been a committed partner of Optometry Giving Sight since 2017, and in that time, they’ve found a way to make global giving a natural extension of what their members already do.

Their Growing Through Giving program makes charitable giving remarkably simple: members donate 5% or more of their IncentivEYES® rebate checks to OGS, and PECAA matches the first $20,000 in donations each year. For the average member, that’s roughly $1,250 annually, redirected from rebate income they’re already earning, toward communities that have never had access to basic eye care.

The program also doubles as a practice-builder. Participating members receive a full digital marketing toolkit — social media images, website banners, waiting room video, and a templated patient email — making it easy to share their generosity with the patients who inspire it.

“Professional Eye Care Associates of America’s (PECAA) Growing Through Giving program gives the organization’s member doctors an easy way to support charitable projects within the optical community, while promoting good works within the practice. In collaboration with Optometry Giving Sight, this program harnesses the charitable giving power of the PECAA community and provides a simple and effective method to grow practices through cause-related marketing and branding,” says Jonathan Worrall, PECAA president.

“The goal of Growing Through Giving is to raise funds to support Optometry Giving Sight’s mission to end preventable blindness and vision impairment through the establishment of optometry-based, long-term solutions around the world. PECAA members who participate receive a Tax-Deductible donation receipt from OGS annually. To date, PECAA Max members have donated more than $1M to Optometry Giving Sight,” Worrall adds.

We are grateful to PECAA for their long-standing commitment to OGS and for making global giving an effortless part of everyday practice life.

PRACTICE SPOTLIGHT: MOUNTAIN VIEW OPTOMETRY

Mountain View Optometry Logo

For two decades, Dr. Tom Wilk, Dr. Michele Naruszewicz, and the entire team at Mountain View Optometry have shown up for the World Sight Day Challenge, year after year, without fail. Since 2006, they’ve raised more than $93,000 for sustainable vision care around the world. More than donations, they’ve built a legacy.

Mountain View Optometry Team

And they didn’t slow down in 2025, even with a major clinic renovation underway. Instead of pulling back, they leaned in, launching an online fundraiser and extending their momentum through the holiday season with a “12 Days of Giving” campaign that was as creative as it was effective. Through emails, social media, newsletters, and in-office outreach, they inspired 30 online donors and rallied their community around something bigger than themselves. Combined with a generous practice donation, Mountain View Optometry raised more than $6,400 in 2025 alone.

“Since we began practicing more than 25 years ago, we have been proud supporters of Optometry Giving Sight. Their simple message of addressing preventable blindness worldwide resonates with our staff and patients during the annual World Sight Day fundraisers. OGS’s dedication aligns with our values of compassionate care and giving back to communities in need.” – Dr. Tom Wilk

Dr. Wilk’s commitment to OGS goes beyond the fundraiser. He’s also a former member of our Board of Directors, where his leadership left a lasting mark on the organization.

To Dr. Wilk, Dr. Naruszewicz, and the whole Mountain View team: thank you. You are exactly the kind of partners who make this mission possible.

Training the Next Generation: Optometry Education Around the World

An eye exam being given to a woman through an OGS funded project implemented by the University of Cape Coast
An eye exam being given at the Eye Train in the Philippines

Optometry Education Around the World

Grantees: VOSH California, Charis Vision and Health Mission, Canadian Vision Care, University of Cape Coast

Every donation to Optometry Giving Sight funds two kinds of impact: the patient who receives an exam or a pair of glasses today, and the optometrist who will provide that care for decades to come. Many of our funded projects include an education component — here’s a closer look at four whose training work is particularly central to their mission.

VOSH California — Nicaragua
VOSH California has been foundational to the development of optometry in Nicaragua, helping to establish the country’s first optometry school at the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua (UNAN). An OGS grant is now funding a Specialty Contact Lens Clinic within the Visionary Clinic in Managua, providing hands-on training to UNAN students and graduates in scleral and rigid gas-permeable contact lens fitting — services previously unavailable in the country — while delivering affordable, advanced care to patients who need it most.

Canadian Vision Care — Philippines
For more than 12 years, Canadian Vision Care’s Eye Train project has delivered eye care from two converted railway cars in Manila — a permanent, locally managed clinic that has served over 120,000 patients and now functions as a clinical training site for Filipino optometry students. An OGS grant is helping to expand the clinic’s capacity and deepen its outreach, including immersive learning experiences when Canadian optometry teams visit each year.

University of Cape Coast — Ghana
OGS awarded a grant to UCC’s School of Optometry and Vision Science to launch Opto-SCOPE, a program that embeds mobile eye care units within Ghana’s existing community health compounds in the Central Region. Final-year optometry students gain hands-on clinical experience through the program while bringing vision services to rural communities that currently have none — a model designed to be replicated and sustained well into the future.

Charis Vision and Health Mission — Nigeria
In partnership with Arthur Jarvis University in Akpabuyo, Cross River State, OGS helped fund a state-of-the-art optometry clinic — one now reported to house diagnostic equipment not available in many Nigerian teaching hospitals. The clinic serves the surrounding community while giving optometry students hands-on clinical training. Late last year, the facility was formally commissioned in a ceremony that also celebrated the induction of seven new Doctors of Optometry.

By investing in this life-changing work, we are helping to build a future where quality eye care is not a one-time gift, but a lasting, local reality that the community owns and sustains. Your donations make a difference now and into the future.

Sight in Action: Building Eyecare from the Inside Out

Building eyecare from the inside out

Grantees: Charis Vision and Health Mission

Each year, donations to Optometry Giving Sight (OGS) enable us to issue grants to fund projects globally that provide immediate eye care to those in need today, and expand optometry so vision care is available for years to come.

Optometry Giving Sight awarded a grant to Charis Vision and Health Mission, in partnership with Arthur Jarvis University, to strengthen optometry education and expand access to eye care in Akpabuyo, Cross River State, Nigeria. The project equips the University’s optometry clinic with modern diagnostic technology, supports student training through hands-on clinical experience, and brings eye care directly to communities that have had little access to it.

In its first year, the project has moved quickly from setup to impact. Nearly 400 people have been screened across campus, local markets, and community health centres — 77 of whom received free glasses, and 59 of whom were referred for further treatment including cataract and pterygium surgery. Optometry students have been central to every step, conducting screenings and community outreach under the supervision of senior lecturers. On World Glaucoma Week, they visited a busy local market to educate traders and residents on the dangers of a disease that takes sight without warning. On World Optometry Day, three students represented the project in a live radio broadcast reaching audiences across Calabar and beyond.

The clinic is now fully operational, with a dedicated power supply ensuring uninterrupted care. A permanent plaque at the entrance acknowledges OGS as the funding partner — a small detail that speaks to something larger: the beginning of a lasting institution.

By investing in this life-changing work, we are helping to build a future where quality eye care is not a one-time gift, but a lasting, local reality that the community owns and sustains. Your donations make a difference now and into the future.

Partner Spotlight: Fluorescene

leading the conversation. expanding the mission.

Fluorescene Group is a leading digital advocacy partner and a catalyst for progress within the eye care industry. As the parent organization behind some of optometry’s most engaged online communities, Fluorescene Group bridges the gap between eye care professionals and leading brands to drive innovation and foster meaningful collaboration.

At the heart of their mission is a commitment to lead the online discourse in eye care with scientific rigor and compassion. Their flagship platform, ODs on Technology, serves as a premier learning and news portal. It functions as the dedicated “tech-forward” sister site to the world-renowned ODs on Facebook group, expanding that community’s reach into deep-dive technical education.

Through the ODs on Technology ecosystem, members gain access to several distinct “innovation zones” tailored to the evolving needs of the profession:

  •     Deep Learning: Where experts go deep on the ideas reshaping eye care and health technology, emphasizing that human intelligence remains the driver behind AI.
  •     Mic Input: The home of Eye. Talk. Tech., an eye tech education podcast series that brings subject matter experts and real conversations to the intersection of eye care and technology.
  •     Early Access: Exclusive previews of tools and platforms—from quantum computing to AGI—tested before they move into the mainstream.
  •     Proof of Concept: A dedicated space where innovation is validated through clinical pilots, early adopters, and real-world results.
  •     Radar Feed: Real-time future signals and tech trends, from robotic-assisted surgery to the latest FDA frameworks on AI software.
  •     Plug & Play <pnp>: Action-oriented, straightforward resources focused on solving real-world clinical problems fast.

Fluorescene Group is powered by Dr. Alan Glazier, an optometric thought leader and an eye care industry expert who believes that technology is fundamentally transforming the profession. Their support of Optometry Giving Sight ensures that as the industry evolves, the global mission to eliminate preventable blindness remains at the forefront of digital innovation.

“At Fluorescene, we bring together real clinical insight, emerging technology, and authentic peer-to-peer conversation,” said CEO Nicole Skibinski. “Our commitment is to elevate the profession while ensuring that progress in technology continues to serve both the clinician and the global mission of improving vision care.”

We extend our sincere thanks to Fluorescene Group for their partnership and shared commitment to clinical excellence, practice growth, and our global mission to provide the gift of sight to those in need.

PRACTICE SPOTLIGHT: HILLSBORO VISION CLINIC

For the team at Hillsboro Vision Clinic, supporting Optometry Giving Sight isn’t a once-a-year gesture — it’s woven into how they do business. Dr. Drew Perry gives monthly, contributes quarterly through PECAA, and in 2025 was one of OGS’s largest World Sight Day Challenge donors, raising funds through a clinic day dedicated entirely to giving back.

This year, the team hosted a sunglass raffle featuring donated frames from Nike, Longchamp, Zeal, and Ray-Ban — and sweet treats courtesy of one of their own patients. It was a community effort in the truest sense.

Office Manager Krystle Goff put it simply: “If we could reach across the world to help people find hope in regaining sight by providing much needed eye care and glasses, we most certainly would — but OGS is the closest to that we can get, and it’s an honor to be a part of such a wonderful foundation.”

We couldn’t have said it better ourselves. Thank you, Dr. Perry, Krystle, and the entire Hillsboro Vision Clinic team for your extraordinary generosity and your big hearts.

 

 

Practice Spotlight: Henderson Vision Centre

Photo of the team at Henderson Vision Centre wearing their World Sight Day Challenge t-shirts
Henderson Vision Centre logo

Celebrating Henderson Vision Centre as the Second Highest Practice for the 2025 World Sight Day Challenge.

For the team at Henderson Vision Centre in Winnipeg, Manitoba, supporting Optometry Giving Sight isn’t a new initiative; it’s simply part of who they are. The practice’s connection to OGS predates its current practitioners, rooted in the longstanding commitment of Dr. Scott Mundle, and carried forward with enthusiasm by the colleagues who followed.

That continuity paid off in a big way with Henderson Vision Centre being among the top practices for the past several years. In 2025, they ranked as the #2 highest fundraising practice in all of Canada and the United States for the World Sight Day Challenge — raising a remarkable $10,318.

Dr. Melina Chow, who joined the practice and inherited that giving spirit, puts it simply:

“We’ve been supporting OGS since before I joined the practice. Dr. Scott Mundle was very involved with OGS, and we have continued to support them. The work OGS does goes beyond helping people who live in developing countries; they train people there as well and develop continuity of care within those communities. And it’s so easy to bring it up to patients, for them to see and understand the mission, and ultimately to raise funds for OGS.”

But Dr. Chow is quick to share the credit. “I just really want to shout out my staff — they’re the ones that drive our fundraising and make it all happen!”

With over 40 years of serving the North Winnipeg community, Henderson Vision Centre brings that same dedication to patients near and far. We are deeply grateful to the entire HVC team for their generosity, and for showing what’s possible when a practice decides to bring its whole team along for the mission.