Vision Problems During COVID-19 Pandemic

People have unfortunately developed serious vision problems due to the drop in eye care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Learn more by clicking the link below.

A close-up image of a bright blue eye gazes into the camera.

Eye of the Storm: Vision Problems Part of COVID-19’s Collateral Damage

The coronavirus tidal wave has made Dr. Ruth Williams rethink what she considers essential and elective care in her field of ophthalmology – which cases constitute an emergency, and which count as routine.

Continued Virtual Classes Thanks To Grotta Grant

The Grotta Fund for Senior Care awarded VLANJ nearly $10,000 in COVID-19 relief funding! This grant allows us to provide Beyond Sight wellness classes, peer support groups, and technology-focused offerings over Zoom video conferencing through the end of 2020, at no charge to participants. Read more by clicking the link below.

 

A laptop shows multiple people in a Zoom conference class.

Grotta Fund Awards $10K to Keep VLANJ Programs Virtual During Pandemic

DENVILLE, NJ — Soon after the COVID-19 pandemic began, Vision Loss Alliance of New Jersey pivoted from in-person to virtual programs to keep participants – many of them at high risk for the virus – safely connected.

A New Technique To Reverse Vision Loss

What happens when you inject healthy cells into damaged eyes? Click the article link below to learn more about a recent study on this topic.

A redheaded woman with large green eyes adjusts her glasses as she stares into the camera.

New cell injection technique could help reverse forms of vision loss

University of Toronto Engineering researchers have developed a new method of injecting healthy cells into damaged eyes. The technique could point the way toward new treatments with the potential to reverse forms of vision loss that are currently incurable. Around the world, millions of people live with vision loss due to conditions such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD) or retinitis pigmentosa.

Eating For Healthy Eyes

Americans may not be eating enough of the foods and nutrients that they need to protect their eye health. Click the article link below the image to learn what nutrients you may need to be eating more of!

A smiling, laughing woman in a multi-colored shirt holds lemon wedges in front of her eyes in a silly way.

Eating for Eye Health – Food & Nutrition Magazine

According to the World Health Organization, global average life expectancy continues to rise and is increasing faster than it has at any other time during the last 50 years. Approximately 9 percent of the world’s population is 65 or older; this number is expected to grow to 17 percent by 2050.

Red Light and The Retina

Learn what a simple red light could do for eyesight!

A close-up bright blue eye stares to the side.

Can red light recharge the retina?

With the retina aging quicker than other organs in the body, due to the high concentration and decline of mitochondria in photoreceptors (light-sensitive rods and color-sensitive cones), researchers in a new study took a fresh look at improving mitochondrial function. The study was published June 29 in the Journals of Gerontology: Series A.

Exercise And Vision Loss

A dark-haired woman in a black top breathes out slowly as she lifts a small pink weight.

How can exercising help to slow or prevent vision loss? ScienceDaily.com shares some insights on how exercise can slow or prevent several common causes.

Exercise can slow or prevent vision loss, study finds

Exercise can slow or prevent the development of macular degeneration and may benefit other common causes of vision loss, such as glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy, new research suggests. The new study from the University of Virginia School of Medicine found that exercise reduced the harmful overgrowth of blood vessels in the eyes of lab mice by up to 45%.