but this should be of interest to you:
http://www.iacenter.org/cuba/cuba_medstudents0108/U.S. med students get free training in Cuba
By Bryan G. Pfeifer
Detroit
Jan 20, 2008
There's a bright ray of hope for students in the United States who want to become doctors. And it's shining in socialist Cuba.
Beginning in 2001 students from the U.S. began studying in Havana for free at the Latin American School of Medicine (LASM). Originally 500 students were offered scholarships annually. This has been increased to 1,000. The only condition is that the students make a commitment to serve poor communities in the U.S. after receiving their medical licenses.
This is in stark contrast to the U.S. where, confronted with a capitalist educational system rife with institutional oppression and massive economic barriers, poor working class and/or students of color are virtually excluded from pursuing medical and most other degrees. Entrance exam fees and tests alone can be thousands of dollars. Poor students in the U.S. wanting to obtain an M.D. are often forced to either go deep in debt through high-interest loans and/or rely on loved ones who are also facing economic disasters—such as layoffs, foreclosures and bankruptcy.
Most of the U.S. students who have either graduated from the LASM or are now in the medical program are people of color and/or women. In U.S. medical schools it’s just the reverse.
http://www.ifconews.org/node/19Eight US students graduate from the Latin American School of Medicine
"We get everything from books, even uniforms. But the conditions are that we go back to our communities, wherever we're needed, and we provide healthcare and that's what we really want to do, so we're actually looking forward to it," said Evelyn Erickson, a graduate from New York.
Nearly 100 US students are currently receiving training at the Latin American Medical School in Havana.
The U.S. students praised Cuba's universal, free health-care system, which is community based and focuses on preventing illness before it becomes more serious and costly, in contrast to the U.S. health industry indicted for being profit-based in Michael Moore's recent film "SiCKO."
"We have studied medicine with a humanitarian approach," said Kenya Bingham, 29, of Alameda, California. "Health care is not seen as a business in Cuba. When you are sick, they are not going to try to charge you or turn you away if you don't have insurance," she said.
The main difference in studying in Cuba was that there was no charge and the graduates can begin their practice debt-free, said Jose De Leon, 27, from Oakland. "When medical doctors graduate in the United States they are usually in debt, between $250,000 to $500,000, and spend the first 10 years of their careers paying it off," he said.