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Adebola trained as a medical doctor in Nigeria, but after a few years of clinical practice she decided to focus her career in public health. “In the course of practice I realized that a number of the diseases I was seeing in the pediatric department where I was working –

Jawad, a nurse from Tunisia, describes his first three months in the U.S. as like walking in a dream; he could not believe he was here. The opportunities were beyond his expectations. “You could get a job like that,” he said, snapping his fingers. He worked in warehousing and then

It was a love for practicing medicine that led Adriana to leave her home country of Venezuela in 2016 to start a new life in Miami, FL. After training for 10 years to be a physician and a recent fellowship in infectious disease, she was practicing medicine as a pediatrician

Comprehensive paid “Midternship” program will on-ramp immigrant professionals into open jobs in the healthcare sector. Together with NewYork-Presbyterian, one of the largest academic medical centers in the country, Upwardly Global has co-designed and launched a paid, mid-career internship program to on-ramp internationally-trained immigrants into open roles in the healthcare sector.

In May 2021, Upwardly Global launched a campaign to capture the inspiring stories of the immigrant women in our program. You can read more about it, and their stories, here: #WomensStories – Upwardly Global

Legislation would authorize a federal study to understand and help remove systemic barriers to employment for newcomers to America  Washington, D.C.— Upwardly Global is applauding the introduction of the Bridging the Gap for New Americans Act in the U.S. Senate, following its passage through the House of Representatives in September