75 Years of Eye Care Innovation and Access
The year 2022 marked Alcon’s 75th anniversary and, as we celebrated this milestone by reinforcing our commitment to delivering innovations that improve sight, we continued our important work of expanding access to eye care to communities around the world.
Alcon sees a world where treatable, preventable conditions affecting eye health receive the attention they need, regardless of an individual’s geography, gender, age or socioeconomic status. Currently, more than 1 billion people are living with uncorrected vision impairments — 90% of those individuals live in low- and middle-income countries6. Through training and education programs and partnerships that improve access and affordability, we are bringing eye care to those who need it.
Addressing Unmet Needs Through Innovation
We currently operate in the global ophthalmic surgical and vision care markets, which are large, dynamic and growing. As the world population grows and ages, the need for quality eye care is expanding and evolving, and we estimate that the size of the eye care market in which we operate is approximately $32 billion and is projected to grow mid-single digits per year from 2022 to 20278.
Although it is estimated that 90% of all visual impairments are currently preventable1, treatable or curable, we operate in markets that have substantial unmet medical and consumer needs. For example, based on market research, it is estimated that there are currently 65 million people with moderate to severe vision impairment due to cataracts4, 1.8 billion who suffer from presbyopia2, 153 million with uncorrected refractive errors1, 146 million with diabetic retinopathy4, 103 million living with glaucoma5 and approximately 1.4 billion who suffer from symptoms of dry eye3, among other unaddressed ocular health conditions. In addition, there are 1 billion people living with some form of unaddressed visual impairment6.
A growing aging population continues to drive the increased prevalence of eye care conditions worldwide, as the number of persons aged 60 years or over is expected to more than double by 2050, rising from 962 million globally in 2017 to 2.1 billion in 20507. Cataracts, a clouding of the eye’s lens that impairs vision, are the world’s leading cause of preventable