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US: $ 100 million health education plan from Latin America

The United States today announced a $ 100 million plan to train half a million health workers in Latin America during the US Summit in Los Angeles.

The new American Health Service will aim to improve the knowledge and skills of 500,000 health professionals over the next five years, mainly in the areas of research and public administration, the White House said in a statement.

The announcement was made at a time when US President Joe Biden is expected to attend the summit today, with the aim of trying to regain the region in which China is expanding its influence.

The training will cost $ 100 million, but the US will not cover the full amount and is looking for ways to raise funds, mainly through the Pan American Health Organization.

The pandemic “revealed to us the many problems of global health systems and stressed the importance of stable and resilient health systems for the entire population,” the White House said.

Since the beginning of the covid-19 pandemic, China has strengthened its role in Latin America by providing rapid vaccinations.

Cuba has also been exporting public health doctors for years, a practice that has angered former US President Donald Trump, who has suspended Washington’s contribution to the Pan-US Health Organization over alleged links to it.

On Tuesday, US Vice President Kamala Harris announced $ 1.9 billion ($ 1.77 billion) in private sector commitments to support job creation in Central America to reduce immigration to the United States.

As early as last year, private companies announced they would spend $ 1.2 billion on the so-called northern triangle, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. These are the countries from which immigrant caravans to the United States usually depart.

The US Summit, which Biden sees as an opportunity to resume dialogue with Latin America on critical issues such as immigration, kicked off in Los Angeles on Monday with problems.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has decided not to attend after Washington announced it would exclude Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua from the summit, accusing them of “lack of democratic space and respect for human rights.”

Source: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

Source: Capital

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