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Medical history immigration

The Canadian Immigration Bureau has no relevant regulations on the evaluation of medical examination results, and the visa officer depends on the situation, but we can roughly estimate the impact of certain diseases on visas based on previous experience.

A. posing a threat to public health or safety;

It will excessively increase the Canadian government's investment in health or welfare.

These diseases include: AIDS, severe kidney disease, severe heart disease, high-risk infectious diseases and so on. The Canadian government did not clearly list these diseases, and the decision was made by immigration officials.

AIDS is a high-risk disease, so even HIV carriers are very likely to be refused visas.

Followed by pneumonia and tuberculosis. People with a history of tuberculosis are likely to be diagnosed as non-infectious after three days of sputum culture; And after 3 months, the X-ray film was reviewed to confirm that there was no recurrence.

Then there is the possibility of syphilis and diabetes refusal. Applicants will be required to examine and prove that they are not contagious or serious enough to burden the Canadian medical system.

The impact is not as great as expected, but hepatitis B, as long as the liver function is normal, generally will not affect the visa.