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Huge medical bill. Please help!

torontosm

Champion Member
Apr 3, 2013
1,677
261
Although I do agree that unfortunately the Canadian tax payer is likely to bear the huge bill I disagree that this is the way the system is designed to work. The system is designed for people to pay their own bills. Would warn you that the outstanding bill is likely going to cause problems when it comes to your parents getting a new visitor visa.

Agreed wholeheartedly. Not paying your bills is clearly abusing the system, and is wrong.
 

torontosm

Champion Member
Apr 3, 2013
1,677
261
Thanks a lot for your reply.
Is it possible for us to pay for rehab in Canada out of pocket? We are trying to raise funds for rehab.
No. You need to clear your existing debt with the medical system before trying to obtain additional services from it. If you can't afford the treatment you have already had, how can you afford new treatment?
 
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DEEPCUR

Champion Member
Apr 12, 2016
2,428
642
If the hospital wants to send him back to India, why don't you let them do that and then you move there to support him and his further treatment. That'll bail you out of lot of stress.

Sure, you'll have your family and job here, but what would you have done if something like this had happened to him while he was in India? Do the same now.
 
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canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
55,587
13,519
If the hospital wants to send him back to India, why don't you let them do that and then you move there to support him and his further treatment. That'll bail you out of lot of stress.

Sure, you'll have your family and job here, but what would you have done if something like this had happened to him while he was in India? Do the same now.
The hospital isn’t going to pay to send him to India. That will be up to the family to arrange.
 

Bs65

VIP Member
Mar 22, 2016
13,187
2,420
There really seems to be a gap in the insurance requirements for a super visa versus for example the IEC program. The latter requires insurance for the duration of the IEC permit AND to include medical repatriation to home country.

Compare that with the basic Super visa requirement as below which not only has a minimum coverage but no repatriation requirement , almost something given average ages of parents/grandparents you would think would also be mandatory.

So advice to anyone reading this post would be to ignore the minimum dollar recommendation given for medical cover a lot more is better as is a medical repatriation provision to avoid the above scenario :

have medical insurance from a Canadian insurance company that is:
  • valid for at least 1 year from the date of entry
  • at least $100,000 coverage
 
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canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
55,587
13,519
There really seems to be a gap in the insurance requirements for a super visa versus for example the IEC program. The latter requires insurance for the duration of the IEC permit AND to include medical repatriation to home country.

Compare that with the basic Super visa requirement as below which not only has a minimum coverage but no repatriation requirement , almost something given average ages of parents/grandparents you would think would also be mandatory.

So advice to anyone reading this post would be to ignore the minimum dollar recommendation given for medical cover a lot more is better as is a medical repatriation provision to avoid the above scenario :

have medical insurance from a Canadian insurance company that is:
  • valid for at least 1 year from the date of entry
  • at least $100,000 coverage
This is really something that the government should include in the plan. I would send some an emails. You never know maybe someone may actually do something.