In many LMICs, eye care workers in rural areas can be quite isolated and struggle to access relevant, up-to-date information, training, or professional development opportunities. Many educational resources are unaffordable, inaccessible or more relevant to high-income settings.

The Community Eye Health Journal was established to provide practical, evidence-informed guidance to eye care providers, managers and policymakers in low- and middle-income settings to support them to offer better eye health services to patients and communities. We are the only international journal catering to the whole eye health team, focusing on practical and clinical aspects of eye health delivery in low-resource settings. Our readers include ophthalmologists, ophthalmic nurses, optometrists, allied health personnel, managers, and decision-makers, including Ministry of Health officials and heads of national blindness prevention programmes.
We work with a global team of eye care leaders and providers to create and distribute four annual issues covering the clinical and public health aspects of eye health service delivery. Our content includes review articles, practical guidance, case studies, and real-world experiences of individuals who plan and deliver eye care. Information is visually appealing and easy to digest for both specialist and non-specialist audiences, making the journal both easy to translate into other languages and an excellent resource for teaching and patient education. All content is fully open access without charge to readers or authors, and most articles are specially commissioned from relevant experts.
Learn more about CEHJ: https://www.cehjsouthasia.org/
