Dear Friends,
I'm Alexis from Lebanon.
I had applied through the FSW programme and received my ITA just today! Yay!
The problem is my wife has MS (multiple sclerosis).
She is taking injections for it and it is totally under control, and has no symptoms or disability, she is a working professional like I am.
I am the primary applicant, and we are going to take our 10 year old son with us.
Apparently, if she keeps on taking the medicine, it exceeds the yearly cap of ~CAD7.000 per person Canada allows for health expenditure.
I see 2 possible ways to go through this and need your valuable opinions:
1. Don't declare it at the time of medical exam (no way it can be detected without an MRI scan). Take your drugs with you and buy them with cash either in Canada or bring them from EU every 3 months.
What happens if she has a medical problem and has to notify the healthcare providers there of her condition once we begin living in Canada for a few years?
2. Go honest and mention it on medical examination.
This will probably lead to our application being denied due to excessive demand I guess?
After the deny it, I think they give us a chance to object or show a mitigation plan for the costs?
If so, a mitigation plan that includes me bringing over 100.000 CAD to Canada with me, and showing my home in Lebanon as collateral to cover any and all drug needs for my wife would be enough? What else should I be doing?
Do I have any other options?
Thanks in advance.
We really need your help...
I'm Alexis from Lebanon.
I had applied through the FSW programme and received my ITA just today! Yay!
The problem is my wife has MS (multiple sclerosis).
She is taking injections for it and it is totally under control, and has no symptoms or disability, she is a working professional like I am.
I am the primary applicant, and we are going to take our 10 year old son with us.
Apparently, if she keeps on taking the medicine, it exceeds the yearly cap of ~CAD7.000 per person Canada allows for health expenditure.
I see 2 possible ways to go through this and need your valuable opinions:
1. Don't declare it at the time of medical exam (no way it can be detected without an MRI scan). Take your drugs with you and buy them with cash either in Canada or bring them from EU every 3 months.
What happens if she has a medical problem and has to notify the healthcare providers there of her condition once we begin living in Canada for a few years?
2. Go honest and mention it on medical examination.
This will probably lead to our application being denied due to excessive demand I guess?
After the deny it, I think they give us a chance to object or show a mitigation plan for the costs?
If so, a mitigation plan that includes me bringing over 100.000 CAD to Canada with me, and showing my home in Lebanon as collateral to cover any and all drug needs for my wife would be enough? What else should I be doing?
Do I have any other options?
Thanks in advance.
We really need your help...