Orbis and Heidelberg Engineering Expand Collaboration During Visit to the Flying Eye Hospital in Rwanda

New content explores global eye care innovations, equitable training access, and the future of sight-saving technology.

The medtech imaging and data solutions company Heidelberg Engineering and sightsaving nonprofit Orbis have come together on board the Orbis Flying Eye Hospital during its latest programme in Kigali, Rwanda, to announce the expansion of their collaboration in making educational content accessible to eye care professionals worldwide and advancing clinical research for better patient outcomes. 

As part of a newly announced clinical project in Lusaka, Zambia, Heidelberg Engineering will deploy its advanced multi-disciplinary imaging platform optimised for the anterior segment, ANTERION, to support patient pre-op imaging and to generate robust, data-driven evidence required for the integration of optical biometry into routine cataract surgery protocols. 

The announcement was made in a recorded video conversation featuring Kfir Azoulay, Managing Director of Heidelberg Engineering, and Dr Hunter Cherwek, Vice President, Clinical Services and Technologies, at Orbis International.

Kfir Azoulay

Managing Director Heidelberg Engineering

With the launch of the new clin­i­cal pro­gramme in Lusa­ka, Zam­bia, Orbis and Hei­del­berg Engi­neer­ing aim to sup­port more equi­table, democ­ra­tised access to advanced eye care. By lever­ag­ing Heidelberg’s advanced imag­ing tech­nolo­gies, we seek to doc­u­ment real-world improve­ments in sur­gi­cal out­comes through high-res­o­lu­tion imag­ing and pre­cise pre­op­er­a­tive measurements.

The recording was made on board the Orbis Flying Hospital, the world’s only fully accredited ophthalmic teaching hospital on board a plane—highlighting both organisations’ shared commitment to tackling avoidable vision loss and improving eye health services in underserved areas. The conversation covered a range of topics, including: 

  • How Cybersight—Orbis’s free, award-winning telemedicine and e-learning platform—is helping tens of thousands of eye care professionals around the world build their skills, with support from Heidelberg Engineering.
  • How new technologies like artificial intelligence, telemedicine, and remote diagnostic tools are opening up access to quality eye care, especially in communities with limited resources.
  • A look inside the Flying Eye Hospital’s project in Rwanda, where local medical teams gained valuable skills through hands-on training and virtual learning—both aboard the aircraft and at partner hospitals.
  • The biggest challenges facing eye care in underserved regions, and how organisations can work together to ensure that life-changing treatments reach more people who need them.
Dr Hunter Cherwek, Vice President, Clinical Services and Technologies at Orbis International and Kfir Azoulay, Managing Director of Heidelberg Engineering, stand outside the Orbis Flying Eye Hospital in Rwanda

Dr Hunter Cherwek, Vice President, Clinical Services and Technologies at Orbis International and Kfir Azoulay, Managing Director of Heidelberg Engineering, stand outside the Orbis Flying Eye Hospital in Rwanda.

Dr Hunter Cherwek

Vice President, Clinical Services and Technologies

Orbis was found­ed on com­bin­ing inno­va­tion and oph­thal­mol­o­gy. And we still do that today with our work at the con­flu­ence of tech­nol­o­gy and train­ing. I love how much the field of oph­thal­mol­o­gy has grown and how Orbis is glob­al­is­ing that tech­nol­o­gy, whether its arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence, telemed­i­cine or dis­tance learning.

Sight-Saving Support

This collaboration builds on a successful partnership in 2024, during which Heidelberg Engineering: 

  • Funded four high-impact Cybersight webinars, joined over 2,000 times by practitioners in countries including Afghanistan, Somalia, and Ukraine.
  • Supported Orbis research into retinoblastoma, a life-threatening childhood eye cancer, showing that telemedicine significantly improves diagnosis and survival outcomes. 

In 2025, Heidelberg Engineering continues to fund a new series of four live Cybersight training sessions. 

The next webinar will be:

  • 9th October 2025, 1:00PM UTC - Enhancing Cataract Surgery Outcomes with Surgical Technologies & Techniques (sign up here

Details for the next sessions will be released in due course on the Cybersight website. 

Orbis has been transforming lives through the prevention and treatment of avoidable blindness for over four decades. With a network of partners across Africa, Asia, and Latin America, Orbis is working to make eye care available everywhere, for everyone, so that no one has to experience the consequences of avoidable blindness and sight loss.

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