University of Miami Special Report: Cuba and the Caribbean

Cuba & The Caribbean Special Report

  • The Environment
    • A Museum of Marine Life
    • Exploring Energy Options for Cuba
    • Working Together to Build a Sustainable Future
    • Influencing Hurricane Intensity
    • Finding Keys to Coral Survival
    • A Pregnancy Exam for Jaws
    • Protecting Flora, Fauna, and Humans in the Caribbean Biological Corridor
    • Father of Dust
    • Science as Diplomacy
  • The People
    • A Conversation with Yoani Sánchez
    • – Conversando con Yoani Sánchez
    • A Unique Cultural Perspective
    • – Una Perspectiva Cultural Única
    • Unearthing the Mysteries of the Caribbean
    • El Mar y Él
    • Helping Hands in Haiti
    • Tracing Circuitous Lines of the Black LGBTQ Experience
    • Student Organizations Embrace Caribbean Culture
    • A Winning Team
    • Exploring Shipwrecks in the Caribbean
    • Language and the Negotiation of Identities
    • Cuban Lecturer Inspires Students through Stories of Resilience
    • Chinese Influences on Life and Religion in Cuba
    • A Chinese-Cuban Secret Society in Havana
  • Business & Economy
    • Restoring Cuba’s Historic Infrastructure
    • Serving the Underserved in Dominican Republic
    • A Bright Future for Caribbean Fish
    • A Close Look at Cuba’s Health Care System
    • Studying Caribbean Currency
    • Haiti After Hurricane Matthew
  • Health Care
    • Sharing Ideas Amid a Changing Culture
    • Cuba Water Hassles
    • Sharing Insights On Trauma Care
    • Delaying Motherhood for Childhood
    • There’s Something in the Waters of Puerto Rico’s Guánica Bay
    • Health Care in Haiti
    • Missions of Mercy
    • Transforming Nursing Education in Guyana
    • Creative Insight on Cuba’s Wastewater System
    • A ‘Living Laboratory’ for Studying Multiple Sclerosis
    • A Hemispheric Approach to Bioethics and Health Policy
    • Campeche and UM Join Hands to Improve Public Health
    • Comparative Studies Could Identify IBD ‘Triggers’
    • A Close Look at Cervical Cancer in Haitian Women
  • Politics & Policy
    • A Renewed, Tenuous Relationship
    • A Trusted Ally for Leftists
    • GTMO: Mayberry with a Caribbean Breeze
    • On the Frontlines of Immigration
    • Marrying Science and Policy in The Bahamas
  • Arts & Culture
    • A UM Architect’s Connection to Cuba
    • Digital Home for Cuban Theater
    • Football Flashback: ‘Canes vs. Cuba
    • An Interdisciplinary Hemispheric Collaboration
    • Exploring Architectural Wonders
    • Sanctuaries Reveal ‘Otherworldly’ Past
    • Unexpected Reception
    • Connections to the Past
    • Havana: The ‘Rome of the New World’
    • The Lowe Features Caribbean Art
    • A Musician Grows in Cuba
    • Afro-Cuban Religion: Surviving and Thriving Underground
    • The Musical Divide of Charismatic Worship in Haiti
    • Impresiones: Sights and Sounds from Travels in Cuba
    • The Fruits of Caribbean Literary Studies
    • Jazz Cubano!
  • Centers & Institutes
    • ICCAS: A Hub for Information on Cuba at the University of Miami
    • Abess Center: Saving Coral Reefs
    • CCS: Hemispheric Collaboration
    • – CCS: Colaboración Hemisférica
    • UMIA: Collaborative Scholarship in the Americas
    • CCS: Using Computational Mapping to Communicate Culture
    • CHC: A Collection of Historical Gems
    • – CHC: La “joya” de las Colecciones Cubanas
    • UMIA: A Hub for Caribbean Research
    • UM Hillel: Connecting to Jewish Cuba
    • UM Hillel: A Vibrant Patronato, the Cuban Jewish Community
    • UM Hillel: Student Perspectives from Cuba
    • ‘Cane Talks: Examining the Culture of Cuba
Campeche and UM Join Hands to Improve Public Health
Campeche and UM Join Hands to Improve Public Health

The agreement establishes collaboration in training, clinical and research initiatives.

The University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine signed a memorandum of understanding with the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche and INDESALUD (the Instituto de Servicios Descentralizados de Salud Publica del Estado de Campeche), to foster collaboration on education, training, clinical, and research initiatives, and to encourage the exchange of their respective faculty members and students.

UM President Julio Frenk signed the agreement in September 2016 at the Newman Alumni Center with Dr. Álvaro Emilio Arceo Ortiz, secretary of health and general director of INDESALUD Campeche, and Gerardo Montero Pérez, provost of the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. UM Executive Vice President and Provost Thomas J. LeBlanc welcomed the delegation to the Coral Gables campus.

“UM believes that we become stronger through strategic alliances, and thanks to the memorandum of understanding that we are formalizing today our joint forces will be greater than the sum of our individual efforts,” LeBlanc said.

President Frenk said that the cooperation agreement with Campeche, a state in the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico, is aligned with the University of Miami’s aspiration to be the hemispheric university, an aspiration that would take full advantage of the University’s location at the gateway to the Americas.

“This is a great opportunity to develop a platform for both innovation and education, and from there to the entire hemisphere,” said Frenk. “So today we are taking a first step in new ways of collaboration to advance science, educational human resources and different ways to apply results in health care and other areas.”

About the Photo

From left to right: Gerardo Montero Pérez, provost of the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche, Dr. Álvaro Emilio Arceo Ortiz, secretary of health and general director of INDESALUD Campeche, University of Miami President Julio Frenk, and Thomas J. LeBlanc, UM executive vice president and provost.

Join the Conversation:

Follow on Twitter:
UM Miller School of Medicine, @umiamimedicine
University of Miami, @univmiami
UM News, @univmiaminews

Secretary Arceo, speaking on behalf of the Governor of Campeche, Alejandro Moreno Cárdenas, said that health issues are a priority in Campeche, thanks in large measure to President Frenk’s leadership as minister of health in Mexico from 2000 to 2006. Just hours before the signing, the Mexican government recognized the state of Campeche as one of the nation’s public health leaders, Arceo said.

“This memorandum reflects that our human resources will be addressed in a strategic manner, and it will respond to the people of Campeche’s main requirement: social protection in health,” said Arceo.

The delegation from Campeche also visited the medical campus, where members met with Steven M. Altschuler, senior vice president for health affairs and CEO of UHealth—University of Miami Health System—and Thinh H. Tran, chief clinical officer and chief operating officer of UHealth. During that meeting, they discussed sharing expertise in health care education, with a focus on public health and how it can assist the economy of Campeche.

The delegation also met with representatives from the Miller School’s International Medicine Institute, led by Eduardo de Marchena, associate dean for international medicine. There is a longstanding relationship between the Miller School and the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche, whereby medical students and physicians have come to Miami for training. Friday’s discussion centered on expanding the program to include clinical research and continuing education programs.

- BARBARA GUTIERREZ / UM News

  • Home
  • The Environment
  • The People
  • Business & Economy
  • Health Care
  • Politics & Policy
  • Arts & Culture
  • Centers & Institutes
  • About This Report
University of Miami
  • Coral Gables, FL 33124
  • 305-284-2211
UM Network
  • About UM
  • UM News and Events
  • Admissions
  • Alumni Association
  • UHealth
  • Hurricane Sports
  • ’Cane Watch
  • UM Culture Transformation
Tools and Resources
  • Academic Calendar
  • People Search
  • myUM
  • CaneLink
  • Blackboard
  • Workday
  • Employment
Visit
  • Campus Map
  • Parking & Transportation
Connect

Copyright © 2023 University of Miami. All Rights Reserved. Emergency Information Privacy Statement & Legal Notices Title IX & Gender Equity Website Feedback