Is color blindness an eye disease with significant visual impairment?

Color blindness is a disease that involves the loss of the ability to recognize certain colors, and it is also a visually impaired eye disease.
Color blindness is related to the lack of one or more wavelength-sensitive chemicals in the cells of the optic vertebrae, and it is a visually impaired disease that is hereditary and is also a sexually transmitted recessive disease.
Color blindness is a condition that affects daily life because of the loss of the ability to recognize certain colors. In addition, most people with total color blindness are extremely sensitive to brightness and are therefore particularly photophobic, with symptoms such as amblyopia and very poor vision.
If the color blindness is congenital, it cannot be cured, and the only way to improve the ability to change colors is to wear color-correcting lenses. If it is acquired, it may be treated with surgery or medication, depending on the cause of the color blindness.