Dominica getting new off-shore medical school

Roseau – Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit announced on Tuesday that Dominica had entered into an agreement for the establishment of an off-shore medical school in the island.

It has been nearly four years since Ross University left Dominica for Barbados under controversial circumstances after having been on the island for the past 40 years.

During the delivery of the budget speech in Parliament on Tuesday, Skerrit said since the departure of Ross, the government had received several expressions of interest to establish a medical school in the north of the island.

“I am pleased to announce that after several months of negotiations, government has entered into an agreement with CSOM Holdings Limited for the operation of a medical school at the former Ross University campus at Picard that will be named the American Canadian School of Medicine,” he said.

Skerrit added the school will offer a four-year medical degree designed for students who have already completed Bachelor degrees and will be run by an experienced team comprising doctors who have held positions at major universities in the United States, including a former vice president of operations of the Ross University School of Medicine.

Skerrit said most of the students are expected to come from Canada, the United States, and the Caribbean, and initial preparations for a September 2023 commencement have started and will accelerate over the next few months.

“I urge all Dominicans to be prepared for the opportunities, which will be created with the return of a medical school to Portsmouth,” he said. “We are optimistic about the potential of this new school and its positive impact on Dominica and on the people in the north in particular.”

(CMC)

 

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