Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
International

US Lawmakers Move To Speed Up Visa Approvals For Indian Doctors

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Apr, 2015 01:13 AM
    Citing a shortage of physicians in the US, two lawmakers have introduced a bipartisan legislation to speed-up visa approval for Indian and Pakistani doctors slated to work at US hospitals.
     
    Called the Grant Residency for Additional Doctors (GRAD) Act of 2015, the legislation introduced by Democrat Grace Meng and Republican Tom Emmer, both members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, would direct the State Department to speed up the visa approval process for international physicians.
     
    The lawmakers say "currently, foreign physicians scheduled to serve their residencies at American hospitals are encountering extremely long delays in obtaining J-1 visas from US Embassies in their countries, particularly in India and Pakistan".
     
    The J-1 is a temporary non-immigrant visa that foreign physicians use to work in US medical residency programmes.
     
    The holdups have resulted in major dilemmas for those doctors and the US hospitals -- many in rural and underserved communities -- at which the physicians are set to work, they said.
     
    In many instances, the delays have forced hospitals to withdraw offers from foreign physicians who had already accepted.
     
    "The excessive delays in approving visas for international physicians is causing unnecessary havoc for those doctors and the American hospitals that are depending on them," said Meng.
     
    "This ineffective approval process must be improved so that these doctors can enter the US as planned, and provide the critical medical care needed in many communities throughout the country," she said.
     
    "As American hospitals face doctor shortages, this important legislation will increase healthcare access across the country by eliminating the persistent backlog of J-1 Visas," said Emmer.
     
    "By improving oversight and training at US Embassies we can ensure our Foreign Service Officers have all the tools they need to properly process each application in a timely manner," he said.
     
    "This bipartisan bill doesn't just address issues important to the State Department and the applicant; it will also benefit the patients of underserved hospitals by giving them access to medical care when they need it most," Emmer added.
     
    With over a million doctors, the US has 24 doctors for 10,000 persons.
     
    With a membership of over 100,000 physicians, fellows and students of Indian origin in the US, the Association of American Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) claims to be the largest ethnic organisation of physicians.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil
    MILAN - The founder of the Luxottica luxury eyewear maker has taken over temporarily as CEO amid management turmoil that has tanked the company's stock.

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US
    US groups in favour of the legal use of marijuana have intensified their campaign to have Alaska, Oregon and the District of Columbia approve the recreational...

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US

    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life

    Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life from the Jundallah militant organisation, media reported Tuesday....

    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life

    U.S. Midterms: Stage may be set for a big vote on Keystone XL pipeline

    U.S. Midterms: Stage may be set for a big vote on Keystone XL pipeline
    WASHINGTON - A certain Canadian pipeline appears poised to spring back to the top of the American political agenda, with the upcoming congressional elections setting the stage for a vote on the long-delayed Keystone XL project.

    U.S. Midterms: Stage may be set for a big vote on Keystone XL pipeline

    School opens in Haiti in honour of Canadian Mountie killed in earthquake

    A vocational school is set to open Monday in Haiti in honour of a respected Mountie from New Brunswick killed almost five years ago in a devastating earthquake while he was on an educational mission in the Caribbean country.

    School opens in Haiti in honour of Canadian Mountie killed in earthquake

    Key question: How did Dallas health worker caring for Ebola patient catch the disease herself?

    Key question: How did Dallas health worker caring for Ebola patient catch the disease herself?
    How did it happen? That's the big question as federal health officials investigate the case of a Dallas health worker who treated an Ebola patient and ended up with the disease herself.

    Key question: How did Dallas health worker caring for Ebola patient catch the disease herself?