Accredited Carribean Schools List 3/23 & Misc
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List of Accredited Medical Schools in the Caribbean as of March 2023
● All Saints University School of Medicine, Commonwealth of Dominica
● American University of Antigua College of Medicine, Antigua and Barbuda
● American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine, Sint Maarten
● Aureus University School of Medicine, Aruba
● Avalon University School of Medicine, Curacao
● Medical University of the Americas, Nevis
● Ross University School of Medicine, Barbados
● SABA University School of Medicine, SABA
● Saint James School of Medicine, Anguilla, Saint Vincent, and the Grenadines
● Spartan Health Sciences University School of Medicine, Saint Lucia (on probation)
● St George’s University School of Medicine, Grenada
● St. Matthew’s University School of Medicine, Cayman Islands
● Texila American University, Guyana
● Trinity Medical Sciences University School of Medicine, Saint Vincent, and the
Grenadines
● University of Medicine and Health Sciences (UMHS), St. Kitts
● Windsor University School of Medicine. Saint Kitts and Nevis
● Xavier University School of Medicine, Aruba
Notes:
1. ECFMG-recognized accreditation policy begins in 2024.
2. Initial reporting will be on Accreditation status in the World Directory and in the
ECFMG status report.
3. The report will be available to all students, USA Residency/fellowship program
directors, Medical regulatory authorities, and others in 2024.
4. The Recognized Accreditation Policy will continue to evolve at ECFMG’s sole
discretion. The requirements of the policy are in addition to all other policies
related to ECFMG Certification.
5. USMLE is the qualifying exam to apply for Residency and practice in the USA.


Karma and the Destiny of an Indian American Surgeon is the memoir of trailblazing physician, Dr. Navin C. Shah, who emigrated from India to the United States in the early 1970s. While raising a family and maintaining a urology practice in the Washington, DC, area, Dr. Shah organized and cofounded the American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin, which went on to represent more than 80,000 Indian American doctors. The author describes his part in the struggle for equality for hundreds of thousands of international medical graduates in the US that led to the Health Professions Reauthorization Act of 1992. Throughout his career, and in various leadership roles, Dr. Shah has also focused on efforts to take the best of American medicine to the country of his birth, and to maintain the highest standards of medical care and treatment for prostate cancer in the US.
