Contact Information: Media Contact: Dawn Sullivan or Perrin McCormick Hart-Boillot 781-893-0053 aua@hartboillot.com
American University of Antigua College of Medicine Files Lawsuit Against US State Medical Board
Caribbean Medical School Files Suit Against the Arkansas State Medical Board for Discrimination and Fourteenth Amendment Violations
| Source: AUA
ANTIGUA and NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwire - April 30, 2009) - The American University of Antigua (AUA), a
major U.S. modeled medical and nursing school in the Caribbean listed by
the World Health Organization, has filed a lawsuit in the United States
District Court against the Arkansas State Medical Board (ASMB) and its
individual members for unfairly discriminating against graduates of medical
schools located in the Caribbean who seek license to practice medicine in
Arkansas, especially Americans who attend and graduate from those schools.
The AUA Complaint, filed jointly with two current AUA students and two AUA
graduates, alleges that the ASMB -- in collusion with the Liaison Committee
on Medical Education (LCME) and its two sponsoring bodies, the American Medical Association (AMA) and
the American Association of Medical Colleges
(AAMC) -- is unlawfully, willfully and intentionally denying AUA
students the right to apply for and to obtain licenses to practice medicine
in Arkansas without due process of law and without equal protection of law,
in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Rather than institute its own standardized process to evaluate and approve
individual applicants and medical schools, the ASMB improperly claims to
defer to the California State Medical Board's list of approved and
disapproved schools. However, even though AUA is not on California's list
of disapproved schools, ASMB added AUA to its disapproved list. It did so
without conducting a site visit, examining the school's curriculum or
considering information compiled by the medical board of any state. By
comparison, the State of New York granted AUA's application for approval of
its clinical studies program based upon a thorough and detailed
investigation of AUA, its curriculum, its faculty, its facilities and the
quality of the medical education it offers.
"There is a critical shortage of doctors in Arkansas and only one medical
school, yet motivated and accomplished US citizens and Arkansas residents
with medical degrees are being prohibiting from practicing medicine in
their home state as a result of the AAMC, AMA and Arkansas State Medical
Board's short sightedness and indolent approval practices," said Neal
Simon, AUA Founder and President.
A recent report from the United States Department of Health and Human
Services identified more than 225 areas in which there is a shortage of
medical health care professionals in the State of Arkansas.
The AUA Complaint asks the Court to restrain the ASMB from including AUA on
its list of disapproved medical school without proper investigation under,
or adherence to, Regulation No. 3 of the Arkansas State Medical Board.
About The American University of Antigua
The American University of Antigua (AUA) offers medical and nursing
programs designed to make sure students meet the requirements of medical
and nursing licensure in the United States and achieve passing scores on
the U.S. Medical Licensing Examinations. A group of world-class American
physicians and medical education professionals chartered the University to
address the shortage of healthcare professionals faced by the United
States. To learn more, visit www.auamed.org.
About AUA College of Medicine
The AUA College of Medicine is the only U.S. modeled medical school in the
Caribbean with hospital-integration in the early semesters. AUA offers a
United States-based medical school curriculum comparable to those found in
U.S. medical schools. The University recently joined with Manipal
University of India to offer the Manipal University Twinning Program at
Kasturba Medical College International Center (KMCIC), On March 30, 2009,
the Times of India ranked Manipal University as the
number one private medical university out of 150 private schools, and
number two out of all the 256 medical universities in India. Together,
both campuses afford students the option to complete their coursework at
either the AUA or KMCIC campus, and offer hands-on clinical experience the
first semester.
About AUA School of Nursing
Students of AUA's School of Nursing (AUASON) benefit from the program's
clinical-based curriculum in a campus setting. Graduates earn an ASN and
are eligible to become licensed as an RN. Licensed AUASON graduates may
take advantage of an exclusive relationship with CUNY-Lehman, through which
eligible AUA graduates may matriculate into Lehman's BSN program.