Colour Blind Awareness
The Colour Blind Awareness organisation has been founded to raise awareness of colour blindness (colour vision deficiency) and aims to be the first point of reference in the UK for people seeking information on colour blindness.
Contacts details
Worminghall
HP18 9JT
What is colour blindness?
Colour blindness (colour vision deficiency, or CVD) affects approximately 1 in 12 men (8%) and 1 in 200 women in the world. In Britain, this means that there are approximately 3 million colour blind people (about 4.5% of the entire population), most of whom are male. Worldwide, there are approximately 300 million people with colour blindness, almost the same number of people as the entire population of the USA!
There are different causes of colour blindness. For the vast majority of people with deficient colour vision, the condition is genetic and has been inherited from their mother, although some people become colour blind as a result of other diseases such as diabetes and multiple sclerosis or they acquire the condition over time due to the ageing process, medication, etc.
Causes of Colour Blindness
Colour blindness is usually a genetic (hereditary) condition (you are born with it). Red, green, and blue colour blindness is usually passed down from your parents. The gene that is responsible for the condition is carried on the X chromosome, and this is the reason why many more men are affected than women. The inheritance process is explained in more detail in the section Inherited Colour Vision Deficiency.
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- Everyone, regardless of age
- Visual impairments
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