Abstract

With the Cuban health system hailed as one of the best in the world, its doctors have a high reputation in the field of primary care in less-developed countries. This article provides an insight into the Latin American School of Medicine (Escuela Latinoamericana de Medicina (ELAM)) as a means of helping our understanding of the process involved in creating a medical workforce that is suited to the developing world. The article reviews the available peer-reviewed literature and evaluates additional media to make an assessment of the curriculum and teaching and learning experience at ELAM. The findings reveal an insightful way of selecting students from low-income backgrounds and teaching that mimics curricula seen at medical schools in the UK, with the addition of modules in homeopathic medicine and a focus on placements in primary care. The article reveals some problems for students who have struggled to adapt their skills to fit the healthcare systems in their home countries. Attitudes towards students are generally positive, though there are a number of reports on student welfare issues. The article concludes that the overwhelming impression is that students are happy to compromise on small comforts in exchange for a subsidised medical education.

Highlights

  • Cuba’s health status has grown in the last few decades following the expansion of their acclaimed medical schools, to welcome a growing number of INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CUBAN STUDIES 9.1 SPRING 2017THE LATIN AMERICAN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE (ELAM) 143 international students

  • Rural Medical Service (RMS) aimed to provide ‘disease prevention and health revitalisation services for those most in need, whether they are poor, in precarious health or live far from urban centres’ (Gorry 2012b). This formed the foundations of the community service ideology that is taught at ELAM and other medical schools in Cuba

  • While the programme was initiated with the intention of educating students from developing nations, a number of students from developed nations including Germany, Canada, Israel, and Korea have taken the initiative to approach the Cuban embassies in their home countries – the result has been successful admission to ELAM (Fitz et al 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

THE LATIN AMERICAN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE (ELAM) 143 international students. In 1999, the Latin American School of Medicine (Spanish – Escuela Latinoamericana de Medicina (ELAM)) was founded by the Cuban government to train international students in the field of medicine (Castro 1999).

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