Medical school admission is a highly competitive process that only evaluates and admits the most qualified candidates for entrance, and more students apply than spaces available in schools across the United States. The criteria that U.S. medical schools exercise in making their admission decisions are highly rigorous, including grade point average, future potential in the medical profession, communication skills, bedside manner, leadership skills, and extracurricular activities. As a result, many worthy students are not accepted to the schools of their choice and their dreams are often shattered by this reality. Specifically, in the United States, earning a medical degree is a status symbol that garners much respect and attention from the general public, and the profession is highly regarded as a symbol of position and admiration. Therefore, the competition is fierce and medical training is a very difficult and often exhausting process with significant financial and personal rewards for those who complete and excel in training programs. However, many students that cannot gain acceptance to American medical school programs are not necessarily removed from contention and the opportunity to earn a medical degree. Other options are available in nontraditional settings outside of the United States. An increasing number of medical schools are opening in smaller geographic regions outside the United States, including such areas as the Caribbean Islands, Mexico, and Europe. Because training and accreditation standards vary widely between these areas and the United States, if medical school graduates return to the U.S. To practice, they may encounter some difficulties in attempting to gain entrance to residency programs as well as permanent employment, directly resulting from their medical training. Furthermore, since it is assumed that offshore medical schools typically do not possess the most advanced technology, faculty, training methods, and medical facilities, students that graduate from these schools are ill prepared for the rigorous processes found in U.S. healthcare facilities, nor do they possess the specialized training to work in today's specialty practices. However, in recent years, offshore medical school programs have gained attention and notoriety because they compete with American medical schools for students and revenue, regardless of their perceived value. The following discussion will identify the differences between offshore medical schools and traditional programs and will demonstrate that the training offered in nontraditional environments does not allow students to practice in their desired specialty because the specialized instruction is not available. Furthermore, it will be demonstrated that the standards applied in offshore medical programs does not compare to the outstanding training received in many United States medical schools. As a result, physician potential is limited in scope, net worth, and overall value.
Offshore Medical School Programs
Rigorous criteria and limited opportunities for enrollment in U.S. medical schools have resulted in an increase of offshore medical schools in nontraditional locations. Many of these programs are specifically designed for American students because they can accommodate the enrollment that traditional schools cannot manage because of their strict admission criteria and limited enrollment capabilities. Canadian students have also demonstrated an interest in these schools, and they have been warned that their chances of practicing medicine with a degree from an offshore school are very limited (Korcok 865). Despite these warnings, two of the most popular Caribbean medical schools, St. George's University in Grenada and Ross University on the island of Dominica, have graduated a number of Canadian students since their inception. In total, approximately 20 medical schools exist in this area that typically admit American and Canadian students into intensive medical training programs.
St. George's Medical School was founded in 1970 by Charles Modica, and Ross University was founded by entrepreneur Robert Ross, both under primitive conditions in comparison to U.S. facilities (867). American educators did not believe that these schools could provide a quality education to students and laughed them off as scams: "It was widely believed that 'for-profit' proprietary schools would never measure up to the quality of U.S. Or Canadian schools accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education. Given the lack of up-to-date clinical clerkship facilities and postgraduate training positions, their graduates were never expected to make it back into mainstream North American medicine. The conventional wisdom was that the intricate web of examinations required of foreign medical graduates would be an insurmountable barrier, and state licensing boards would never approve their applications" (867). These schools experienced hardships in their beginning years, but eventually, distinguished faculty from the U.S., Canada, and other countries traveled to these areas to establish curriculum, standards, and setup dorms...
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