TED 精选演讲 | 手机APP可以做眼科检查了!
摘要: Peek Vision 是一种基于智能手机的眼科检查系统,通过低成本硬件附件和专用应用程序,使社区医疗工作者能够在资源匮乏地区进行高质量视力筛查与眼底检查,从而实现可预防性失明的早期发现与干预。
- 全球3900万盲人中,80%生活在低收入国家,多数失明病例可通过现有医疗手段治愈或预防。
- Peek Vision 利用智能手机和不到5美元的3D打印硬件,替代传统昂贵、笨重的眼科设备,实现便携式眼底成像与视力测试。
- 该系统支持多语言、适用于各年龄段人群,并通过可视化工具帮助非专业人士理解检查结果。
- 结合太阳能充电背包和地理信息系统,单个医护人员即可深入偏远地区开展高效筛查,并通过短信通知安排后续治疗。
- 项目强调社区参与,利用本地领袖网络提高患者随访率,显著降低可治愈眼病导致的失明风险。
小白老师说:全球有三千九百万人失明,他们当中绝大多数人是可治愈,并且可预防。问题来了,如何为那些生活在没有昂贵眼科检查设备和诊疗条件的偏远地区的人们提供检查和治疗呢?现在只要下载一个 APP,然后给手机嵌入一个价美物廉的小硬件,就可以愉快地开始检查啦!
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演讲全文
There are 39 million people in the world who are blind. Eighty percent of them are living in low-income countries such as Kenya, and the absolute majority do not need to be blind. They are blind from diseases that are either completely curable or preventable.
00:20
Knowing this, with my young family, we moved to Kenya. We secured equipment, funds, vehicles, we trained a team, we set up a hundred clinics throughout the Great Rift Valley to try and understand a single question: why are people going blind, and what can we do?
00:41
The challenges were great. When we got to where we were going, we set up our high-tech equipment. Power was rarely available. We’d have to run our equipment from petrol power generators. And then something occurred to me: There has to be an easier way, because it’s the patients who are the most in need of access to eye care who are the least likely to get it.

01:05
More people in Kenya, and in sub-Saharan Africa, have access to a mobile phone than they do clean running water. So we said, could we harness the power of mobile technology to deliver eye care in a new way? And so we developed Peek, a smartphone [system] that enables community healthcare workers and empowers them to deliver eye care everywhere.
We set about replacing traditional hospital equipment, which is bulky, expensive and fragile, with smartphone apps and hardware that make it possible to test anyone in any language and of any age. Here we have a demonstration of a three-month-old having their vision accurately tested using an app and an eye tracker.
01:51
We’ve got many trials going on in the community and in schools, and through the lessons that we’ve learned in the field, we’ve realized it’s extremely important to share the data in non-medical jargon so that people understand what we’re examining and what that means to them. So here, for example, we use our sight sim application, once your vision has been measured, to show carers and teachers what the visual world is like for that person, so they can empathize with them and help them.

02:19
Once we’ve discovered somebody has low vision, the next big challenge is to work out why, and to be able to do that, we need to have access to the inside of the eye. Traditionally, this requires expensive equipment to examine an area called the retina. The retina is the single part of the eye that has huge amounts of information about the body and its health.
We’ve developed 3D-printed, low-cost hardware that comes in at less than five dollars to produce, which can then be clipped onto a smartphone and makes it possible to get views of the back of the eye of a very high quality. And the beauty is, anybody can do it. In our trials on over two and half thousand people, the smartphone with the add-on clip is comparable to a camera that is hugely more expensive and hugely more difficult to transport.
03:08
When we first moved to Kenya, we went with 150,000 dollars of equipment, a team of 15 people, and that was what was needed to deliver health care. Now, all that’s needed is a single person on a bike with a smartphone. And it costs just 500 dollars. The issue of power supply is overcome by harnessing the power of solar. Our healthcare workers travel with a solar-powered rucksack which keeps the phone charged and backed up.
Now we go to the patient rather than waiting for the patient never to come. We go to them in their homes and we give them the most comprehensive, high-tech, accurate examination, which can be delivered by anyone with minimal training. We can link global experts with people in the most rural, difficult-to-reach places that are beyond the end of the road, effectively putting those experts in their homes, allowing us to make diagnoses and make plans for treatment.

04:08
Project managers, hospital directors, are able to search on our interface by any parameter they may be interested in. Here in Nakuru, where I’ve been living, we can search for people by whatever condition. Here are people who are blind from a curable condition cataract. Each red pin depicts somebody who is blind from a disease that is curable and treatable, and they’re locatable. We can use bulk text messaging services to explain that we’re coming to arrange a treatment.
04:35
What’s more, we’ve learned that this is something that we haven’t built just for the community but with the community. Those blue pins that drop represent elders, or local leaders, that are connected to those people who can ensure that we can find them and arrange treatment.
04:50
So for patients like Mama Wangari, who have been blind for over 10 years and never seen her grandchildren, for less than 40 dollars, we can restore her eyesight. This is something that has to happen. It’s only in statistics that people go blind by the millions. The reality is everyone goes blind on their own. But now, they might just be a text message away from help.

05:25
And now because live demos are always a bad idea, we’re going to try a live demo.
05:30
So here we have the Peek Vision app. Okay, and what we’re looking at here, this is Sam’s optic nerve, which is a direct extension of her brain, so I’m actually looking at her brain as we look there. We can see all parts of the retina. It makes it possible to pick up diseases of the eye and of the body that would not be possible without access to the eye, and that clip-on device can be manufactured for just a few dollars, and people can be cured of blindness, and I think it says a lot about us as a human race if we’ve developed cures and we don’t deliver them. But now we can.
06:12
Thank you.
常见问题
Peek Vision 如何在没有电力的偏远地区工作?
医护人员使用太阳能充电背包为智能手机供电,确保设备在无电网区域持续运行。
普通人能否操作 Peek 系统进行眼科检查?
可以。经过简单培训的社区工作者即可使用该系统完成视力测试和眼底成像,操作门槛低。
Peek 的检查准确性如何?
在超过2500人的试验中,其眼底成像质量与昂贵专业设备相当,具备临床可靠性。
如何确保被发现的患者能获得治疗?
系统通过地理标记定位患者,并联合当地社区领袖,利用短信通知安排免费或低成本手术(如白内障摘除)。
参考资料
Peek Vision 官方网站
↗提供技术细节、部署案例及临床验证数据
TED 演讲:用手机对抗可预防失明
演讲者为 Andrew Bastawrous,伦敦卫生与热带医学院眼科专家,Peek 项目创始人