MOGADISHU (SONNA) — The Federal Ministry of Health hosted a highly coordinated public health assembly in Mogadishu to formally mark International Glaucoma Awareness Day. This executive-level event was designed to accelerate national education regarding “biyaha indhaha” (Glaucoma), a severe ocular condition that systematically degrades the optic nerve and remains a leading cause of irreversible blindness across the region.
The symposium functions as a core component of the Federal Government’s aggressive strategy to modernize domestic healthcare infrastructure and prioritize preventative medical interventions. Ministry officials utilized the platform to deploy critical public health directives, urging citizens to undergo routine ocular screenings. By shifting the national health apparatus from reactive treatment to proactive early detection, the government intends to drastically reduce the incidence of preventable vision loss among the Somali populace.
Beyond public education, this initiative signals the Ministry’s broader operational focus on expanding specialized medical capabilities within federal hospitals. Equipping local health centers with the diagnostic tools required to identify Glaucoma in its preliminary stages is essential for long-term demographic health. The administration is actively mobilizing resources and coordinating with domestic medical professionals to ensure that vital eye care services become highly accessible to vulnerable communities across all federal member states.
