- Apr 2, 2013
- 122
- 4
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Ottawa
- NOC Code......
- 2174
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- Feb 6 2013
- AOR Received.
- Mar 21 2013
- IELTS Request
- Submitted with application
- Med's Request
- Med - Dec 5 2013 / RPRF_Bio - Dec 6 2013
zardoz said:All immigration applicants that have to take medical examinations are being assessed for two areas. These are simplified and paraphrased as:
1) Danger to the public.
2) Costs too much to the Canadian health system.
It is number 2) that is the "Excessive Demand" test. This is not taken into account where an applicant falls into one of the "Excessive Demand Exempt" groups. CEC is not one of those groups. It's all in the information that I linked to. There is more in the Operational Manuals if required.
Hi zardoz, thank you for the explanation and the links. The links basically define the reason behind identification of this disease and the steps a panel physician should take to identify the same. And your quote mentions that it could impact the health insurance sector in the long run. But it still does not provide a definite answer to my question as to whether it will lead to rejection. Thank you for your posts though. I am still hoping that someone who has gone through this experience will see this post and provide a definitive answer. Diabetes has 2 types. Type 2 being the late onset and milder of the 2. My question really is if both have a chance to get through, or one of them most probably the type 2 or having either has a negative effect on your chances to get PR.