Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
El Shaddai Medical Centre Jamaica; Gynae Associates Hospital (private) Heart Institute of the Caribbean; Kingston Public Hospital (KPH) Maxfield Park Medical Center; Medical Associates Hospital (private) National Chest Hospital (NCH) Nuttall Memorial Hospital (private) Sir John Golding Rehabilitation Center; St. Joseph's Hospital
Jamaica: All American Institute of Medical Sciences: 2011: MD: Offshore: Yes, F0002376 [97] Yes "Initial Provisional Accreditation Withdrawn" by CAAM-HP. [11] Yes University of the West Indies Faculty of Medicine (Mona) 1948: MBBS: Regional: Yes, F0000014 [98] Yes (From 1953) 279: Accreditation for five years, 2023-2028 by CAAM-HP. [11] Yes ...
Caribbean School of Medical Sciences, Jamaica (CSMSJ) International University of the Caribbean (IUC) Mico University College; Northern Caribbean University (NCU) Royale College; University of Technology, Jamaica (UTech) University of the West Indies, Mona; University of the Commonwealth Caribbean (UCC) Western Hospitality Institute
The University of the West Indies School of Dentistry, Jamaica: Programme placed on Probation for 3 years, 2020 - 2023 July 2023 The University of the West Indies School of Dentistry, Trinidad: Accreditation for 4 years, 2019-2023 July 2023 The University of Guyana School of Dentistry, Guyana: Accreditation denied July 2018
In Jamaica there are over 330 health centers, 24 public hospitals, the University Hospital of the West Indies, a regional teaching institution partially funded by Regional Governments including Jamaica, 10 private hospitals and over 495 pharmacies. There are around 5,000 public hospital beds and about 200 in the private sector.
The Medical Council of Jamaica is the licensing body for doctors in Jamaica. Doctors in Jamaica are required to take continuing medical education courses to keep their licences. [1] [2] In 2004, amendments to the country's Medical Act (Jamaica) increased the number of non-doctors on the council. [3]
Jamaica [a] is an island country in the Caribbean Sea and the West Indies. At 10,990 square kilometres (4,240 sq mi), it is the third-largest island—after Cuba and Hispaniola —of the Greater Antilles and the Caribbean . [ 8 ]
Sheila Dorothy King, known as Dorothy, [1] was born in 1932, in Barbados to Henrietta Adina (née Stuart) and Alfred T. King. [2] [3] She grew up in Barbados and completed her secondary education at Queen's College in Bridgetown, before enrolling in medical school at the University College of the West Indies in Mona, Jamaica. [3]