The story of four live bees pulled from inside a woman's eye quickly grabbed people's attention. News reports claimed the bees were "sweat bees", the common name for species in the bee family Halictidae.
There are some contradictory and unlikely statements in the many news reports on this story, so it's hard to know what actually happened. The images accompanying many reports, which some reporters captioned as the live sweat bees in the Taiwanese woman's eye, are actually uncredited images from an unrelated story — a report by Hans Banzinger of a stingless bee species (Lisotrigona cacciae) collecting tears from his eye in Thailand.
All in all, we would consider it extremely unlikely for multiple adult insects to survive inside a human eye for very long. Most halictid bees are too large to get trapped in your eye unnoticed. Female sweat bees also have stingers so you would definitely know straight away!
But whether this story is accurate or not, there are bees who would happily feast on human tears — and blood, sweat and even dead animals. Flower-loving insects like bees and butterflies often seek out other food sources that are at odds with their pretty public image.
So why would bees hang around someone's eye in the first place? It's a bit of a myth that all bees only collect pollen and nectar for food. There are bee species all over the world that also feed on the bodily fluids of living and dead animals, including animal honeydew, blood, dead meat, dung, sweat, faeces, urine and tears. This is a source of important nutrients they can't get from flowers, like sodium, or protein and sugar when floral resources are scarce.