British Virgin Islands Keeps Cuban Doctors…For Now

Amid growing geopolitical pressures across the Caribbean region, the British Virgin Islands has confirmed the continuation of its medical collaboration with Cuban healthcare professionals. This decision emerges as several neighboring nations, including Jamaica, Guyana, Costa Rica, and Honduras, have recently severed ties with Cuba’s longstanding medical exchange program.

The Cuban Medical Brigade has historically served as a vital healthcare resource for small island states and developing nations struggling with medical workforce shortages. While the British Virgin Islands acknowledges no official directive to terminate this partnership, a gradual scaling down is underway. Current arrangements indicate one doctor and three nurses will depart through routine rotations without replacement, leaving three doctors and four nurses remaining in the territory. Authorities clarified they are not actively recruiting additional Cuban medical personnel.

Parallel developments are occurring in Belize, where Prime Minister John Briceño characterized negotiations as “delicate” while pursuing long-term solutions focused on domestic medical training. Briceño emphasized the program’s originally intended transitional nature, stating: “The Cuban medical brigade was never something that would have been permanent. It should have been for a certain amount of time to allow countries to catch up.”

Belize’s strategy involves expanding the University of Belize’s medical program, with students scheduled to commence clinical training shortly. This shift toward developing local healthcare capacity reflects broader regional trends as Caribbean nations reassess their dependence on Cuban medical diplomacy amid complex international relations.