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Introduction of New Zealand Immigrants Physical Examination Items and Results

# New Zealand Immigration # Immigration to New Zealand Introduction, physical examination is a necessary guide. Here is a brief introduction to the items and results of physical examination for New Zealand immigrants. I hope it will help your immigration. Welcome to read!

First, the main items of New Zealand immigrants' physical examination

1. Blood test, including HIV/hepatitis virus and blood component content test;

2. Height and weight test (including body fat rate and body mass index);

3. Urine test (to see if there are protein and red blood cells in the urine to detect whether there are diseases in the kidney);

4. Chest film (X-ray to see if there is tuberculosis);

5. Detection of past medical history;

6. Testing of other routine projects.

Second, the physical examination results of New Zealand immigrants

Under normal circumstances, the physical examination results will be available within one week. After the blood test, urine test and chest X-ray examination are completed, the results will be scored by the doctors and submitted to the New Zealand Immigration Bureau. If you confirm that you want to be notified, you will receive an automatic email confirming that the physical examination has been completed and submitted.

For immigrant applicants who take part in the online medical examination, your medical history and medical examination results will be recorded in the online medical examination system. You will receive an online medical information form provided by the hospital, including detailed medical information. If you don't receive the information form, you can contact the hospital. Your NZER reference number is included in the online medical information form. Please inform Immigration New Zealand when you submit your application to Immigration New Zealand. This code is used to match your medical examination and visa application.

If there is no significant discovery in the physical examination, your physical examination report will be immediately passed by the online physical examination system, otherwise it will be handed over to the staff of the New Zealand Immigration Bureau. If you find something important in the physical examination, the doctor may ask you to do other examinations or physical examination reports. If necessary, the doctor in charge of your physical examination will refer you to other specialists for follow-up examination.

Extended reading: common diseases that may affect immigration to New Zealand.

1. Tuberculosis

If you are in the infection period of tuberculosis or have suffered from tuberculosis in the past (tuberculosis history, tuberculosis recovery period), your medical examination certificate and chest X-ray certificate will be transferred to the medical certification institution of New Zealand Immigration Bureau. Applicants with a history of tuberculosis need to submit all relevant documents, including recent and early (X-rays/films) and corresponding additional reports.

2. Hepatitis B

If the blood test finds that the hepatitis B virus is positive, the immigration officer (even the family doctor or physical examination center who examined you) will inform the applicant at the first time, asking for a second blood test and additional tests on various indicators of hepatitis B virus.

The test results of hepatitis B virus in blood samples will also be obtained within one week. Doctors will give professional conclusions according to the activity of hepatitis B virus and the content of hepatitis B virus in blood, print out a report and send it to immigration officials together with the blood test results. According to the test results of the applicant's hepatitis B virus, the immigration officer can make the following decisions:

(1) small sanyang, and the index is quite low, then the immigration officer will not embarrass the applicant on the issue of hepatitis B;

(2) Small Sanyang, the index is not low, the immigration officer may ask for a third blood test, and then compare the results of the two blood tests to find out whether the applicant's hepatitis B symptoms are in a stable state;

(3) If the index of "Little Three Yang" or "Big Three Yang" is on the high side, the immigration officer will ask for another blood test and the conclusion of the liver disease expert (the family doctor's report is useless), then the applicant needs to take the blood test report and find a liver disease expert to analyze the results at his own expense and issue a report;

(4) Big Sanyang, with a high index. During the onset of illness, the immigration officer may directly reject the applicant's application for immigration, asking for treatment first, and then reapply after the condition is stable.

Most hepatitis B virus carriers are in a small three-yang state, and they can pass the physical examination only by carrying out corresponding tests according to the requirements of immigration officials. However, if the applicant's small three-yang index is high or large three-yang index (virus active period or replication period), then the applicant will encounter some troubles, but many liver disease experts in New Zealand will not make things difficult for hepatitis B patients. As long as there are no symptoms of cirrhosis or fibrosis, experts will generally give test reports that will not affect the immigration application.