|
|
||||
|
Exporting medicine and influence (cuba)
__________________
Moderator - State Licensing Forum Still skeptical after all these years. This is it. There are no hidden meanings.WYSIWYG http://www.internetmedicalschool.homestead.com http://www.chiropractormds.homestead.com/index.html |
|
|||
|
Quote:
why not just unlock this thread- its the same topic and you closed it. http://www.valuemd.com/main-foreign-...ool-story.html
__________________
GI Elective [x]....Wards [] Wards [x] ............Night Float [] MICU [x] ...........Wards [] Wards [x] ............CCU [] Elective!![]......... PGY 1 1/2 [] VACATION!!!! [x] .Move Complete[] |
|
||||
|
locking
Quote:
__________________
Moderator - State Licensing Forum Still skeptical after all these years. This is it. There are no hidden meanings.WYSIWYG http://www.internetmedicalschool.homestead.com http://www.chiropractormds.homestead.com/index.html |
|
|||
|
The Dialy Herald, St Maarten, Friday February 2, 2007
"Over the hump? Cubans hope for end of "camel" buses"
..." For shoreter journeys, Cuban commuters fed up with long delays are looking forward for new city buses to replace the "camel". "I'm a plastic surgeon and here I am hitching a ride", said Juan Antonio, who earns $30 a month and cannot afford a car, a private purchase that requires high level goverment approval. "This will improve one day" My comments: 1.- Of course, imposing those sacrifices to the population (if it happens with a plastic surgeon, imagine the situation of non profesional cubans) it is possible to give free education to foreign students.. 2.- "This will improve one day" Does he really thinks that? After 48 years of Fidel telling life quality will improve, it is kind of hard to continue believing it. Maybe he was afraid of saying something else? (3.- Do any of these american students that go to Cuba, Have though about the fact that when Fidel took the power in Cuba, 1959, Eisenhower was the president of the United States?? Do somebody yet believes that life under that regime in Cuba will improve one day for Cubans? |
|
|||
|
In Yahoo, February 3, 2007
Defecting Cubans stranded in Colombia BOGOTA, Colombia - At least 38 Cuban doctors who defected from a mission in Venezuela have been stranded for months in Colombia, where they have been refused refugee status as they await word on possible asylum in the United States, according to a relief organization…. …More than 500 doctors are believed to have fled the two missions in recent years, most from Venezuela, Alfonso said. Like Toledo and Viamonte, who live in a tiny apartment where even the plates and dish towels are on loan, the majority of asylum-seeking Cuban doctors are living in precarious tenements because they are unable to work in Colombia without refugee status. The couple said they applied for refugee status at the U.S. Embassy on Aug. 11, the same day the new program was announced in Washington. Only one of eight other doctors who applied the same day has so far been granted entry to the U.S., they said. Toledo and Viamonte said they sneaked into Colombia in December 2005, switching taxis five times while driving from town to town and slipping across the border from Venezuela at night. A friend later smuggled out of Cuba their university diplomas and other government records accrediting them as doctors. Toledo and Viamonte were assigned to Venezuela in mid-2003 as part of the Miracle Mission in which Cuba and Venezuela have provided free eye surgery to more than 375,000 poor Latin Americans. The couple said they were forced to work seven days a week for little pay in the countryside near Caracas, and their relations with Venezuelans were tightly controlled. "We couldn't call our families or go out after 5 p.m. The Venezuelan national guard and Cuban authorities watched our every move," Viamonte said. "We never planned on abandoning our duty, but we got tired of being treated like slaves." The couple planned their escape over a year, even keeping their plans secret from their 12-year old son, who lives with Viamonte's parents, when they returned to Cuba for a vacation in July 2005. Alfonso said Colombia's government — Washington's closest ally in Latin America — has so far only given the Cuban doctors a pass of safe-conduct that is renewable every three months. Toledo and Viamonte say they live in fear of being deported to Cuba. "We didn't ask for this law — we thought it was a miracle when this program was announced because it was so explicit and clear," said Toledo, fighting back tears and anger. "Not even for a second did we think we or anyone else would be turned back." |
|
|||
|
This happens around the world
Quote:
|
|
|||
|
Cubans feel betrayed by tourist playground The Telegraph London U.K. Infosearch Fidel Nuñez Research Dept. La Nueva Cuba February 13, 2007 ..."It's a little like being in a zoo," sighed Carlos, a 24-year-old literature student. "But that is the reality of life here. We are caged while the world looks on."... ..."Fidel has starved us," he whispered. "Yes, there is a lack of food but it is more than that. We are starving for information, for opportunity, for freedom. We want to enjoy the same things as those people over there," he said as a fresh batch of tourists spilled out of the doors of a tour bus. Cubans struggle to survive on an average wage of less than £10 a month to supplement the state rations which provide them with basics such as rice and beans and either one small bar of soap or tube of toothpaste a month. Visiting foreigners can spend almost double that on a taxi ride to the airport or a meal in one of Old Havana's state-run restaurants. "It sticks in the throat," says Oscar Espinosa, an independent economist and dissident who was jailed in 2003 for criticising the regime's economic strategy and is now confined to his home on conditional release. "Such obvious inequality in a country where for decades the people have laboured in the mistaken belief that they are creating a classless society. The truth is we have created a paradise for tourists and those that live off them, but for the rest of us, daily life gets worse," he said Cuba's society has been split into those with access to the CUC, the convertible currency used by tourists and sent in remittances from those abroad, and the majority of the population who must rely solely on their salary paid in Cuban pesos. Castro introduced the dual currency in the 1990s as a means of the boosting the economy after the collapse of the Soviet Union when Cuba threw open its doors to foreign tourists. Last year almost 2.5 million foreign travellers, mainly from Canada, Britain, Italy, Spain and Mexico, visited the Caribbean island. The changes are credited with keeping the economy afloat but also created a vast and troublesome gap between the population of 11 million dividing those who have the convertible currency and those who don't. "You can't buy anything with Cuban pesos," said Mr Espinosa. "Anything worth buying – soap, cooking oil, shoes – must all be purchased in convertibles. "We are in a situation where a bell hop or a chambermaid can earn many times the salary of a doctor or civil engineer. What incentive is there now to train to be such a thing?" Mr Espinosa and many others hope that Castro's younger brother will be less inclined to rhetoric and more likely to address the main sources of complaints from Cubans: high food prices, the lack of transport and dilapidated housing. Nowhere is the divide more noticeable than in the historic quarter of Old Havana where crumbling edifices are being carefully restored and converted into boutique hotels and high-price restaurants. The cobbled streets and palm shaded squares, formerly the haunt of Ernest Hemingway and Graham Greene, are once again frequented by wealthy foreigners eager to sip Mojitos in pavement cafes. But two blocks from Obispo Street with its newly opened designer shoe shops, Cuban children play barefoot in the shadow of crumbling tenement houses where a family of seven might share one room. "They are doing a wonderful job making this place nice," said Susana Cruz sarcastically as she waited to collect her weekly ration of rice and beans. "My sister used to live in a place that was falling down. Last year the government came and rebuilt the whole place top to bottom," she explained. "My sister and her two young children live with me now in my place which is falling down. But you should go and visit her old place," she laughed. "It's a hotel now and I hear it has a lovely bar on the terrace where she used to hang out her clothes." MY COMMENT: BUT LET'S GIVE FREE EDUCATION TO FOREIGN STUDENTS, SINCE THEY WILL TALK WONDERFUL THINGS ABOUT CUBAN REVOLUTION! |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
|
LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.valuemd.com/main-foreign-medical-schools-forum/128146-exporting-medicine-influence-cuba.html
|
||||
| Posted By | For | Type | Date | |
| ValueMD - International Medical Schools, Caribbean Medical School, Foreign Med | This thread | Refback | 02-02-2007 01:47 PM | |
|
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| myths about medical school...interesting stuff | AmericanIMG | The Relaxing Lounge | 23 | 06-19-2008 07:56 PM |
| List of Countries where US trained osteopaths are recognized | azskeptic | The Relaxing Lounge | 6 | 10-18-2005 08:53 AM |
| Residency Personal Statement Samples | spongebobpentagonpants | Residency | 0 | 08-19-2005 01:04 AM |
| Training Needs Of International Medical Graduates | azskeptic | Asian Medical Schools | 0 | 02-28-2005 05:53 PM |
| Origins and Locations of Recent Family Medicine Residency Gr | azskeptic | Main Foreign Medical Schools Forum | 0 | 12-14-2003 12:12 PM |
International Foreign and Caribbean medical schools,
ValueMD provides information on medical education from premed to residency