After 13 years of operating in Barbados, the American University of Barbados (AUB) has reached a historic milestone in its medical education program: for the first time, its students are completing required clinical rotations at local medical institutions, led by the island nation’s flagship Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH).
Clinical training is a core, non-negotiable component of modern medical education. Unlike the foundational classroom learning that introduces students to anatomy, pharmacology and disease pathology, clinical rotations place trainees directly in hospital and clinic departments, where they work alongside licensed physicians to engage with real patients, practice diagnostic skills and develop hands-on care experience over dedicated rotation blocks. Prior to this new partnership, AUB students were forced to travel abroad to countries including the United States and Guyana to complete this mandatory training requirement.
The first cohort of trainees began their local rotations on a historic Friday earlier this year: 10 students started placements at QEH, while an additional three began their training at the island’s Psychiatric Hospital. To mark the occasion and embed core values of service from the start of clinical training, AUB organized its annual community outreach initiative, distributing 500 pre-packed fruit bags to patients across all departments at QEH.
Dr. Carlos Chase, Director of Medical Services at QEH, confirmed that the hospital has already integrated AUB trainees into its systems, with interns from the university arriving for placements approximately two months before the first rotation cohort of medical students. He framed the new partnership as a confirmation of the hospital’s growing regional role as a leading medical training hub for undergraduate and postgraduate trainees from institutions across the hemisphere.
“We have upgraded and expanded our training capacity to accommodate students from multiple universities, which will only strengthen our position as a regional center of excellence for medical education,” Chase explained. “There is often negative discourse around this hospital, but we have many outstanding, unrecognized achievements. Our long-standing training program in partnership with the University of the West Indies has long been one of this institution’s greatest beacons of success, and this new partnership expands that legacy.”
For AUB’s leadership, the launch of local rotations is the realization of a goal the institution has held since it first opened its doors in Barbados 13 years ago. “This was our dream from the day we founded this school,” shared Anita Bhat, Chief Executive Officer of AUB, in an address to media on the launch day. “This is a truly historic moment for all of us, and we could not be more excited.”
Bhat emphasized that the partnership extends far beyond benefits for AUB and its student body, delivering tangible advantages to the entire Barbadian community. “This is a win for the school, for our students, and for the wider Barbadian public,” she noted. “Our institution brings economic activity to the island, and we already carry out extensive volunteer work across the country through our long-standing partnerships.” She pointed to AUB’s existing free community clinic, and ongoing collaborations with churches, schools, and leading local health organizations including the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Barbados, the Barbados Cancer Society, and the Barbados Diabetes Foundation.
Meesam Ali Khan, president and director of AUB, joined the announcement remotely from India, where the university’s parent institution is headquartered. Khan explained that AUB’s core mission is to expand accessible, high-quality medical training opportunities for students across global regions, and the QEH partnership directly advances that goal.
Khan praised QEH as an ideal training environment for medical students, highlighting three key strengths: its high volume of patients, the wide diversity of clinical cases it treats, and the depth of experience among its attending medical faculty. “The quality of clinical training depends on three core things: the number of patients you interact with, the range of conditions you see, and the expertise of the physicians guiding you,” Khan said. “QEH has trained University of the West Indies students for decades, so it is already a well-established, proven teaching hospital, which makes it the perfect fit for our program.”
Beyond the clinical training itself, Khan explained that the fruit distribution outreach was designed to prioritize a core, often overlooked value of medical practice: empathy. “We do not just teach our students medicine and cutting-edge medical technology. We teach them to care for patients as people, and empathy is the foundation of that,” he said. Bhat echoed this commitment, adding: “This celebration of our new clinical rotations also serves a deeper purpose: to instill a permanent spirit of community service in our students, and nurture the empathy they need to care for vulnerable people experiencing illness.”
Looking ahead, AUB is planning far-reaching additional collaboration to advance Barbados’ healthcare digital transformation. Khan announced that the institution is preparing to donate 100 digital stethoscopes that can transmit real-time heart and lung sounds remotely via a custom mobile application. The university is also exploring partnerships to expand support through clinical software systems, broader digital health innovation, expanded free clinic services, and larger community outreach initiatives. For all parties, Khan said, the new clinical rotation partnership is a clear win-win: “This arrangement creates shared value for AUB, for Queen Elizabeth Hospital, for our students, and for the entire Barbadian community.”