Hopeful DO said:
I am a 4th year pre-med student at NYIT and I was wondering what really happened in Grenada as a result of the hurricane? What were the real reasons that led to the decision to move students to U.S. locations?
I also want to say that before people start answering this, please be respectful of IMGs, Caribbean medical schools, etc. I goto NYIT in Long Island, New York, and I can say through my experience at NYIT that just because a educational institution is within the United States does not make it inherently better than any other learning institution anywhere in the world. Therefore for anyone to condemn Caribbean medical schools as being inferior is really giving off very arrogant, elitist vibes, which really have no place in the mindset of physicians. Furthermore, for any human being to have the oppurtunity to study medicine anywhere in the world is a real honor and great oppurtunity. What if we all grew up in the Caribbean, Asia, or Africa and decided to goto medical schools of our home country? How would we feel if some American students doctors looked down upon our schools?
Thanks for reading that everyone. I didn't mean to ramble. Just wanted to express my views. 👍
Hi Hopeful,
I'm one of the many SGU students in Long Island and I'm happy to answer any questions about what happened in Grenada. On September 7th, Hurricane Ivan tore the island apart. In emergency management terms, there was 90% devastation, which is to say 90% of man-made structures were without roofs. Now, I would venture a guess that the 10% left out of this equation was the SGU campus. While a few buildings, mainly the VET school, were hit hard, most of the lecture halls and dorms only suffered broken windows and lost shingles.
This might not seem to be too terrible until you consider that only 60% of the student body lives on campus. My husband and I were off campus and we lost our roof, our car, and everything in between. (It was scary as hell!) So with 40% of the student body homeless the administration had a little problem to deal with.
Then you have infrastructure issues, both with the campus and the country. The campus has a generator and a desalination plant, however, fuel was regulated after the storm and so there were electricity issues. The desalination plant was eventually put on line, but with lots of broken pipes and valves from storm damage you couldn't always count on having water- drinking, showering, or toilet. For the first few days after the storm there was very little water around campus at all.
Now, fit this puzzle piece into the overall picture- what the country was going through. After the storm, over 18,000 Grenadians were homeless, and without the privledge of a generator or desalination plant. The country needs to rebuild and with food, fuel, water, and housing shortages, the presence of a couple thousand student who have a comfortable home to return to some place else seems a bit ridiculous. If we were to continue the semester, it couldn't be in Grenada. While waiting for the final word on where we would be relocated, many of us stayed on the island and took EMT shifts, helped rebuild housing, and went out on mobile clinics. When we found out we were coming to the states for school we moved our things out of the dorms to make way for homless staff and professional relief workers: engineers, public health, construction, etc.
The current plan is to return in January. The island needs us. We are 1/3 of their GDP; living in rented apartments, buying groceries, eating out, and spending our money in ways that help the island's economy. I will be happy to return. Although I greatly appreciate the opportunity to continue my semester and am thankul that NYCOM and SUNY have opened their facilities to us, I miss Grenda. SGU has top rate facilities on their campus and I appreciate them all the more now that I'm dealing with our current situation. We are using spaces that current students don't need so naturally they aren't as spiffy as what were used to (I'm assuming the actual labs for NYCOM students are quite nice
🙂). All the NYCOM students have been perfectly friendly, so please don't take the comment the wrong way- it's just part of the situation.
So those are the reasons- plain and simple. I'm sure I probably left something out, and I'm sure some people would be surpised to learn that many of us can't wait to get back to our island. I'm happy to answer any question so please feel free to ask. And Hopeful DO, thanks to you and yours for welcoming us onto your campus
🙂