World Leaders to Meet in Antigua for First Global Summit on Eye Health

In an unprecedented global health initiative, Antigua and Barbuda will host the inaugural Global Summit for Eye Health on November 2, 2026. Prime Minister Gaston Browne announced that world leaders, ministers, and business executives will convene in St. John’s to establish a transformative agenda for vision care worldwide.

The landmark summit, organized in technical partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO) and supported by the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB), represents the first dedicated international gathering to accelerate political, financial, and cross-sector commitments to ocular health. The event will assemble senior representatives from governments, private and public sectors, non-governmental organizations, and funding institutions.

The framework for action revolves around three strategic pillars: Act, Allocate, and Accelerate. These pillars aim to catalyze commitments for integrating vision care into national development plans, increasing sustainable financing, and scaling evidence-based solutions. The summit will serve as both an accountability mechanism and ambition catalyst, challenging participants to transform pledges into tangible progress for global communities.

Five years following the UN Resolution on Vision, the summit will prioritize practical commitments that expand access to affordable, quality eyecare services while strengthening health systems to meet escalating demand. According to IAPB’s landmark report ‘The Value of Vision: The Case for Investing in Eye Health,’ addressing preventable sight loss for one billion people could generate $447 billion annually in economic benefits. This investment would yield 13 million additional years of schooling, create 22 million jobs, and relieve 304 million people—predominantly women—from unpaid caregiving responsibilities.

Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Edinburgh, serving as IAPB’s global ambassador, recently hosted a reception at St. James’s Palace to commemorate the summit’s official launch. Through her extensive work with IAPB, HRH has directly engaged with eye health programs and beneficiaries worldwide, highlighting the life-changing impact of vision restoration.

Prime Minister Browne emphasized the dual human and economic imperative during a video address to the London gathering: ‘Expanding access to vision care could generate hundreds of billions in economic returns annually. This isn’t charity—it’s an investment in inclusive growth, resilience and shared prosperity, particularly for small states like Antigua and Barbuda.’

WHO Director for Noncommunicable Diseases and Mental Health Dévora Kestel noted the significant momentum gained by eyecare on the global health agenda, stating the summit provides ‘an opportunity to support the translation of these global commitments into country action.’

The summit has secured support from numerous high-impact partners including CBM, The Chen Yet-Sen Family Foundation, CooperVision, Cure Blindness Project, The Fred Hollows Foundation, National Vision, RestoringVision, Seva Foundation, and Sightsavers.

IAPB Chief Executive Peter Holland articulated the summit’s ultimate objective: ‘By bringing leaders together, we hope countries, businesses and civil society will make formal public commitments to take specific actions, allocate resources, or achieve measurable targets in our shared goal of ending avoidable sight loss.’