Mirjahan Choudhury receives a free eye screening on the Rangia Put up workplace in India.
Subhamoy Bhattacharjee for NPR
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Subhamoy Bhattacharjee for NPR
Lately, Sangita Kalita has watched as her mom and mother-in-law go to the native temple — known as a naamghar — in Assam State, India and go away disenchanted.
Every go to, their hope was to learn the sacred Hindu texts, “but due to vision issues, they faced a lot of problems recognizing the small letters in the book,” explains Kalita.
In keeping with the World Well being Group, they’re amongst greater than 800 million individuals worldwide that suffer from presbyopia — age-related lack of close-up imaginative and prescient — for which primary studying glasses would assist. But, in line with WHO, in lots of lower-income international locations, fewer than one in 4 individuals who want eyeglasses have them.
Kalita says for her household, getting studying glasses was just too difficult and costly. Whereas in lots of high-income international locations, readers can be found in every kind of shops, in lower-resourced settings, getting a pair typically requires a visit to the hospital or a specialised optical store, often in an enormous metropolis.
Kalita is making an attempt to alter that.
In northeastern India, she’s a part of a staff testing a brand new effort to deal with the problem of getting imaginative and prescient care in distant areas. The thought entails the nation’s huge community of publish workplaces.
A fast eye check in an uncommon place
Kalita was a college trainer. Now, she spends her days at a pink and white kiosk that is towards the brilliant white partitions of the publish workplace within the city of Rangiya.
From that vantage level, she watches as prospects are available in. Some are there to mail packages whereas others use all kinds of providers provided in Indian publish workplaces, similar to opening and accessing small financial savings accounts. Kalita notices how they go about their activity.
“A lot of old people come in who are not even able to fill out the deposit form,” she says.
When she sees them struggling, that is when she steps in. She approaches, asking in the event that they’d like a fast eye check. In that case, she invitations them to the kiosk the place the phrases “get a free eye-screening and high-quality eye glasses here” are written on the prime. After they work by just a few easy exams in a spiral certain e book, Kalita can inform in the event that they want studying glasses. And in the event that they do, they stroll out with a free pair.
Sangita Kalita, an eye fixed screening volunteer, helps purchasers on the Rangia Put up workplace.
Subhamoy Bhattacharjee for NPR
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Subhamoy Bhattacharjee for NPR
The thought for this mannequin got here from a partnership between WHO and the Common Postal Union or UPU. “With an estimated 680,000 post offices operating globally, postal services offer a unique opportunity to reach remote and underserved areas,” the report explains.
The plan was to faucet into the world’s largest postal community — India Put up has over 150,000 workplaces.
“The whole thinking was that we look at an established channel, which has a reach, which has infrastructure, which has people,” says Shweta Verma, deputy director for applications and operations at VisionSpring India.
Below a pilot program run by VisionSpring, Verma says, between December 2025 and Might 2026, greater than 5,000 individuals had been screened in 5 publish workplaces in Assam State.
Verma says 80% of those that acquired glasses had been first time wearers. That “tells us that there was no screening or program for eye health” within the space previous to the pilot, she says.
Convincing skeptics
Getting studying glasses could make an enormous distinction for an individual’s earnings, along with making each day duties simpler. That is very true in Assam State, a area identified for tea manufacturing.
A examine printed in The Lancet International Well being discovered that studying glasses elevated tea pickers’ productiveness by virtually 22% since they should see which leaves to choose and are paid based mostly on the standard of their harvest.
Over the course of the publish workplace pilot, Verma says, they’ve needed to earn the help of postal staff and postmasters.
Initially, she says, “we got a lot of buy-in from the higher-ups,” however postal staff had been skeptical, worrying how this new enterprise would influence workload. So Verma’s staff employed and skilled outdoors people — like Kalita — to implement this system. “Once the program started,” Verma says, “there was a lot of traction also from postmasters.”
Babul Boro is the postmaster the place Kalita works. For the reason that pilot began in December 2025, he says over 1,000 individuals have come into his publish workplace for eye exams and plenty of have gone on to make use of postal providers. He says this enhance to his enterprise is sufficient to make him hope that the pilot turns into everlasting.
The present pilot is slated to wrap up in September. Then, Ella Gudwin, CEO of VisionSpring, says they will look by all the info and contemplate the funding earlier than deciding whether or not to proceed — and even broaden. WHO and UPU have expressed curiosity in taking the mannequin worldwide.
Past imaginative and prescient care
Whereas VisionSpring says this mannequin is a primary for eyeglasses, the hope is that this enterprise demonstrates that publish workplaces can be utilized “for a wide range of health-related services worldwide,” says the WHO and UPU report.
Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal, a doctor and a senior contributing editor at KFF Well being Information, has written about repurposing publish workplaces to deal with medical wants. She says France and Japan are robust examples of the place that is already taking place.
In France, for a small charge, letter carriers can verify on aged people, she says, “just stopping in and having a chat, and kind of checking to see: Is there food in the house? Are they able to get around okay?”
Mantu Das takes a imaginative and prescient check on the Rangia Put up workplace.
Subhamoy Bhattacharjee for NPR
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Subhamoy Bhattacharjee for NPR
In Japan there’s one thing comparable. And in some elements of the U.S., carriers can search for mail piling up and alert a neighborhood company to provoke a welfare verify.
In Kalita’s publish workplace in India, she says, one factor motivates her: The smile she sees on individuals’s faces after she provides them eye glasses. She says it makes her “feel very accomplished and happy too.”
She says she’s considering of the trainer who now not will get complications every day. Her mom and mother-in-law who can now learn the sacred texts. And the tailor who by no means knew that studying glasses may very well be so life altering — and that getting them may very well be as straightforward as swinging by the publish workplace.