Saturday, March 26, 2011

Air raids force Gadh

Air raids force Gadhafi retreat, rebels seize east – Yahoo! News: via news.yahoo.com http://twurl.nl/rpfy6m

‘Brain waste’ th

‘Brain waste’ thwarts immigrants’ career dreams – Yahoo! News: NEW YORK – After finishing medical school in B... http://twurl.nl/raokdy

Cuban doctors strugg

Cuban doctors struggle to prove credentials in US – Yahoo! News: MIAMI – Roberto Carmona sneaked away from hi... http://twurl.nl/2fwosi

Cuban doctors struggle to prove credentials in US - Yahoo! News

MIAMI – Roberto Carmona sneaked away from his superiors disguised as a South African cowboy. While working in Namibia, the doctor donned boots and a big hat so he could slip out to the American Embassy, where he asked about qualifying for a special program for Cuban physicians that he hoped would let him defect to the U.S.

Nearly a year later, he was accepted, just days before his overseas job ended. Carmona fled to Tampa, but escaping his homeland turned out to be the easy part.

Carmona and a number of other Cuban physicians who defected while on overseas assignments have confronted a frustrating contradiction in American medicine: They were allowed into the U.S. because they are doctors. But, once here, they cannot treat patients because Cuba has refused to release or certify their academic records.

Without transcripts, it's nearly impossible for the doctors to take the required medical board exams and to get approval from the U.S. group that accredits foreign physicians.

"To come to this country, we have to spend so much time demonstrating to U.S. immigration officials we are doctors and show them so many documents," Carmona said. "Then why is it once we are here, they don't believe us and make it so difficult for us to work in our profession?"

'Brain waste' thwarts immigrants' career dreams - Yahoo! News

NEW YORK – After finishing medical school in Bogota, Colombia, Maria Anjelica Montenegro did it all — obstetrics, pediatrics, emergency medicine, even surgery. By her estimate, she worked with thousands of patients.

None of that prepared her for the jobs she's had since she moved to the United States: Sales clerk. Babysitter. Medical assistant.

That last one definitely rubbed raw at times.

"I know I was working in my field," the 34-year-old New York resident said. "But that is medical assistant. I'm a doctor."

Montenegro is hardly unique, given the high U.S. unemployment rate these days. Her situation reflects a trend that some researchers call "brain waste" — a term applied to immigrants who were skilled professionals in their home countries, yet are stymied in their efforts to find work in the U.S. that makes full use of their education or training.

Most of these immigrants wind up underemployed because of barriers like language, lack of access to job networks, or credentialing requirements that are different from those in other countries. Some are held back even further because they're also in the U.S. illegally.

Air raids force Gadhafi retreat, rebels seize east - Yahoo! News

Kodak Wins a Round in $1 Billion Apple, RIM Patent Dispute - Bloomberg

Libyan Rebels Retake Ajdabiya as Unrest Continues Across Middle East | News | English

Canadian government collapses - Telegraph

Geraldine Ferraro, first woman VP candidate for major US party, dies at 75 | al.com

BOSTON -- The first woman to run for U.S. vice president on a major party ticket has died. Geraldine Ferraro was 75.

Ferraro died at Massachusetts General Hospital, where she was being treated for blood cancer. She died just before 10 a.m., said Amanda Fuchs Miller, a family friend who worked for Ferraro in her 1998 Senate bid and was acting as a spokeswoman for the family.

An obscure Queens congresswoman, Ferraro catapulted to national prominence at the 1984 Democratic convention when she was chosen by presidential nominee Walter Mondale to join his ticket against incumbents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.