Cuba gir u-hjelp til USA

From: Per I. Mathisen (Per.Inge.Mathisen@idi.ntnu.no)
Date: Fri Feb 16 2001 - 16:45:26 MET

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    Kunne ikke la være å sende denne videre... - Per

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    Chronicle of Higher Education - web daily - February 16, 2001

    Castro Offers Free Medical Training for Low-Income, Minority Americans
    By KATHERINE S. MANGAN

    Fidel Castro has offered six years of free medical education and
    training in Cuba to hundreds of low-income minority students from the
    United States. The offer was welcomed by members of the Congressional
    Black Caucus who helped arrange the deal, but is being greeted more
    skeptically by some American medical educators.

    The Cuban leader extended the invitation after a meeting last year
    with members of the legislative caucus. He said that if the lawmakers
    could recruit some students, he'd provide their education for free.

    Caucus members decided last month to move ahead with the plan.

    "This appears to be an excellent opportunity to improve health care
    in our Congressional districts, as well as a chance to fulfill a
    life's dream for students who couldn't otherwise afford it," said
    Rep. Charles B. Rangel, Democrat of New York. Members of minority
    groups are underrepresented in American medical schools and in the
    medical profession.

    Rep. José E. Serrano, also a Democrat of New York, said his district
    office in the Bronx was contacting high-school counselors to identify
    potential recruits.

    Students, who must be high-school graduates under the age of 26,
    would have to agree to return to their communities to practice
    medicine. In addition to medical education and training, they would
    receive free meals, housing, and textbooks in Cuba.

    The program would be administered by the Black Caucus, but would be
    open to students from other minority groups, as well. Some students
    could be registered this spring, but it may take longer to satisfy
    skeptics that the program is worth pursuing.

    American Medical Association officials have raised concerns about the
    quality of education and training the students would receive, and
    whether they would have a tougher time getting licensed when they
    returned to the United States, where they would be held to the same
    rigorous standards as domestically trained physicians.

    Only 48 percent of the graduates of foreign medical schools passed
    the final stage of their licensing examinations in 1999, compared
    with 92 percent of those who graduated from schools in the United
    States or Canada, according to the National Board of Medical
    Examiners.

    A spokesman for Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Republican of Florida,
    dismissed the Cuban offer as "a propaganda ploy" from a nation that
    has been under a U.S. trade embargo for four decades.

    Fernando Garcia Bielsa, a spokesman for the Cuban Interests Section,
    which represents Cuban diplomats in Washington, countered that the
    offer was merely "a goodwill gesture" from a country that has too
    many physicians and regularly sends medical assistance to
    impoverished areas of the world.

    "Ours is a poor country without a lot of resources, but this is one
    way we can help other people," he said.



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