Leaving her family behind in India over thirty years ago, Archana Chatterjee came to the United States to get her medical training. She was deprived of being with her parents in their final years since she was now in another country caring for others. Chatterjee is one of only three pediatric infectious disease specialists in South Dakota, the others also immigrants. Doctors from all around the world are serving the residents of South Dakota and the state is in need of them. If you are considering immigrating to the U.S. contact USAFIS. They will make sure your application for the Green Card Lottery is filled out correctly. This will increase your chances of being accepted into the Lottery.
One out of six medical professionals working in the USA was not born in the United States. As with Chatterjee, they fill health care jobs in underserved or rural communities, and places that have a harder time attracting medical school graduates from the United States. Data from the Census Bureau’s 2016 American Community Survey reported from a sample of over 160,000 health care professionals, 4.6 were not U.S. citizens and 16.6 percent were foreign-born. The aging population in the U.S. is expected to put a strain on the health care system in the coming years, and the health care industry is expected to grow 18 percent in the next eight years. USAFIS has a team of professionals who will assist you when applying for the Green Card Lottery. If you want to live and work in the U.S., contact them today. They will guide you through the steps of U.S. immigration.