11,000 doctors graduate this year from Cuban universities
Submitted by CHAN on August 1, 2012 - 15:18
By José A. de la Osa, Granma (English weekly edition), July 19, 2012
This July, 11,000 students are to receive their degrees as doctors of medicine; 5,315 Cubans and 5,694 students from 59 countries, the highest total in the history of the nation and an eloquent example of internationalist solidarity.
This year’s graduation of medical students is the largest in Cuban history. These young graduates completed their studies free of charge in medical science universities recognized for their high scientific level and social commitment to the poorest in the world.
Countries with the largest number of graduates are Bolivia, with more than 2,400; Nicaragua, 429; Peru, 453; Ecuador, 308; Guatemala, 170; and Colombia, 175.
According to information given to Granma by the Advanced Medical Studies Department attached to the Ministry of Public Health (MINSAP), the total of this year’s health professions graduates amounts to 32,171, both Cuban and from other countries, including the careers of medicine, dentistry, psychology, nursing, and health technology (which has 21 units).
In addition, Cuban professors are training 29,000-plus students in three careers – medicine, nursing and health technology – in eight countries: Venezuela, Bolivia, Angola, Tanzania, Guinea Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, the Gambia and Timor Leste.
Mariheta Cutiño Rodríguez, national director of MINSAP’s Advanced Medical Studies Department, emphasized the high level of the 43,000-plus professional staff who, within an academic framework, combine educational, investigative and active care, thus giving students comprehensive preparation. She also highlighted values which distinguish Cuban health professionals, such as humanism, solidarity, professional ethics and internationalism.
Cuba has medical colleges in all of the country’s provinces, with the exception of Mayabeque, Artemisa and the Isle of Youth municipality, which have independent faculties.
From January 1959 to 2010 close to 109,000 doctors have graduated from Cuban universities. This year’s medical graduations are taking place in all the provinces, beginning July 18 in Guantánamo and Havana and ending July 24 in Ciego de Avila and Artemisa.
* Haiti has approximately seventy students per year who enroll at the Latin American School of Medicine (ELAM) in Cuba. The enrollment program is in place since 1998. The first graduates were in 2007, numbering 70. In addition, Cuba assists at the Medical School of UNIFA (University of the Aristide Foundation) in Port au Prince, reopened in September 2011 (story here) . Cuba has some 800 health professionals active in Haiti with the Henry Reeve Cuban Internationalist Brigade (story here).