New Eyes partners with several social service agencies to provide eyeglasses to specific client groups.
To meet the need for new eyeglasses in the State of Kentucky more effectively, New Eyes began collaborating with Kentucky Homeplace, a state-funded program that uses lay health workers to improve access to medical care for low-income rural families.
In April 2004, New Eyes stopped issuing vouchers directly to individuals in Kentucky, and began issuing vouchers only through established social service agencies, the largest of which is Kentucky Homeplace. This new process reduces paperwork for the agencies, ensures that caseworkers close to the clients evaluate their need, permits clients to receive vouchers quickly, and enables agencies to prioritize and plan out their voucher distribution.
Click here to read "Homeplace, New Eyes Partner for Better Vision" which was published in the Winter 2004-05 edition of Rural Health Update.
Recent statistics indicate that 19% of the rural population have incomes below the poverty level and over 500,000 residents lack health insurance.
The William G. and Helen C. Hoffman Foundation generously provided a $100,000 grant in 2004, a $50,000 grant in 2005 and a $20,000 grant in 2008 to support New Eyes' program in Kentucky.
New Eyes has partnered with the Kress Vision Program to provide eyeglasses to schoolchildren in New York City since 2000. Kress Vision is a nonprofit organization affiliated with the New York University Downtown Hospital whose mission is to provide vision services at no cost to the underprivileged of New York.
Kress Vision and New Eyes' groundbreaking program provides comprehensive vision services directly to students within the school setting. A Kress Vision eye doctor and technician visit a school to re-examine students who have failed an initial eye screening but have not yet received needed services. If indicated, the doctor writes a prescription, the technician helps the student choose among frame samples, and the completed glasses—paid
for by New Eyes—are sent directly to the student at school.
Many individuals in southern New Jersey live in inner city areas such as Camden, poor rural areas such as the Pinelands, or are migrant workers in low-paying agricultural jobs. New Eyes provides a large number of eyeglasses to the less fortunate in this region in conjunction with the South Jersey Eye Center.
The South Jersey Eye Center is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing free and low cost comprehensive eye care services for the poor throughout Camden County and the surrounding areas. New Eyes pays for eyeglasses for those individuals who have no insurance and who do not qualify for grants or other programs. |