This Christmas, the Herald and The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ are working together to bring the Gift of Sight to the Pacific, where four out of five people who are blind don't need to be. Alarmingly, an increasing number of these are young people, suffering from diabetes-related eye disease. This week, we bring you stories of just a handful of these people and invite you to help us raise money for a sight-saving machine that can improve the lives of people like them.
Ask Clerence Natnaur what makes her happy and the young woman with bandages on her feet answers softly: "I love listening to music, playing guitar and singing."
Later she will sing a hymn for her visitors, at her home in Vanuatu, tapping time with feet that are missing their toes.
What's more, diabetes is also making Clerence, 22, blind. She has Type 1 diabetes, an autoimmune condition where the pancreas does not make insulin.
During the past 20 years there has been an explosion of this disease, particularly in the Pacific Islands where the incidence is among the highest in the world.
Clerence gets around her earth-floor family home in Erakor Village near Port Vila with the help of a walking stick.
To venture further there is the wheelchair her father used after his legs were amputated because of diabetes complications. He died last year, aged 48, from kidney failure.
Amputations are complications that are in plain sight. Eye damage is the hidden curse of diabetes.
Clerence has dense cataracts and diabetic retinopathy, whereby the disease causes bleeding at the back of eye (the retina).
High blood sugar can lead to cataracts, glaucoma, and diabetic retinopathy which is the most common cause of vision loss for diabetics and is a leading cause of blindness among working-age adults.
Removing Clerence's cataracts should improve her eyesight but it must also be done so the back of her eye can be seen to assess her retinopathy. Then laser surgery can be done to stop the bleeding and preserve her sight.
The trouble is, cataract operations have twice been cancelled because of skin infections near Clerence's eyes. If infection got into her eyes it could cause total blindness.
The operations are done by doctors visiting with twice-yearly diabetic outreach teams which are part of the Fred Hollows Foundation's diabetic eye programme.
It is a long time to wait but Clerence hopes it will be third-time lucky for her when the outreach team returns in October.
Her story is about missed opportunity, misunderstanding, superstition and a health system struggling to cope.
She knew her eyesight was poor a decade ago at school when she couldn't see the blackboard. Much later, Clerence learned diabetes was diagnosed back then but nothing was done.
"My father was upset," she told the Herald. "He couldn't accept that I would need lifelong treatment with insulin."
Clerence learned she had diabetes when infection landed her in hospital years later.
In 2014, the toes on her right foot were amputated after infection spread from a cut on her big toe.
Last year, poor eyesight led to the loss of the toes on her other foot. She stood on an insulin needle causing a small puncture wound on her little toe.
Her family first tried traditional treatments. Clerence even stopped taking insulin on the advice of a local healer.
Often, when doctors see patients for the first time, damage is advanced, Vila Central Hospital general surgeon Samuel Kemuel said.
"Most start with just a tiny injury and present late to the hospital, sometimes because they seek an alternative source of medicine, traditional medicine and wait until that doesn't work. So by the time we see them it can be extreme."
Her mother, Jeaneth, is in Samoa on a tourism course she hopes will lead to a job and an improved quality of life for the family. "That is her grand plan," Clerence says.
The day before Clerence's cataract operation is due there is bad news. Outreach team opthamologist Johnson Kasso has found cellulitis, a common bacterial skin infection, on her face.
Dr Kasso explains that makes the operation too risky. He will prescribe antibiotics and see her after a modern eye clinic funded by the Fred Hollows Foundation opens at the hospital in February.
Clerence is close to tears. She says later: "I really wanted it this year but it is not possible."
But the new clinic improves her prospects. It will be headed by Kasso, a native of Vanuatu, who will become his country's first resident opthamologist.
Kasso says: "Hopefully we will save enough of her vision for her to move around the house and have a reasonably normal life."
The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ hopes to raise $70,000 for a new camera to examine patients' eyes in Vanuatu. The camera will greatly improve the early detection of diabetic retinopathy and many other eye diseases, helping reduce the incidence of avoidable blindness.
• Diabetes of all types can lead to complications in many parts of the body and increase the risk of dying prematurely.
• A large proportion of diabetes and its complications can be prevented by a healthy diet, regular exercise, maintaining a normal body weight and avoiding tobacco use.
Source: World Health Organisation
Diabetes and blindness
• Diabetic retinopathy is the most common cause of vision loss among people with diabetes and a leading cause of blindness among working-age adults.
• Diabetic retinopathy involves changes to retinal blood vessels that can cause them to bleed or leak fluid, distorting vision.