What can make you inadmissible depends on the type of application. Are you submitting a spousal sponsorship application or a parent/grandparent application?Faolchu said:So what is it all about then?
What are they checking?
what would actually make you unadmissible ailment wise?
spousal applicationscylla said:What can make you inadmissible depends on the type of application. Are you submitting a spousal sponsorship application or a parent/grandparent application?
The fact that the excessive demand component is waived is very humane. Really shows what a great country Canada is and that it wants to keep families united.1Wayne1 said:Every applicant for a Canada Immigration Visa and some applicants for temporary status in Canada are required to undergo a medical examination by a medical officer.
Though medical examinations are generally confined to a standard physical exam including blood and urine tests and x-rays, prior medical records as well as the applicants' mental state are examined.
Applicants may be denied a Canada Immigration (Permanent Resident) Visa solely on medical grounds, if:
Their condition would endanger the health or safety of the Canadian population at large; or
Their admission might cause excessive demand on existing social or health services provided by the government. *
When determining whether any person is inadmissible on medical grounds, the medical officer is obliged to consider the nature, severity or probable duration of any health impairment from which the person is suffering as well as other factors, such as:
Danger of contagion;
Unpredictable or unusual behaviour that may create a danger to public safety; and
The supply of social or health services that the person may require in Canada and whether the use of such services will deprive Canadian nationals of these services.
* The excessive demand component is waived under the Family Sponsorship category of Canada immigration for the spouse, common-law partner, conjugal partner and dependent children of the Sponsor. The Sponsored person(s) still may be refused if their condition is considered to be a danger to Canadian public health or safety.
In certain circumstances, an individual who does not meet the Canadian medical requirements may be granted a Temporary Resident Permit (TRP) to enter Canada.
For more information about Medical Inadmissibility, see our Medical Examinations FAQ. ( CIC website)
As long as the following does not apply to you, you should have no problem. "Their condition would endanger the health or safety of the Canadian population at large"Faolchu said:spousal application
Are you applying inland or outland? If the former, you are not required to undergo an upfront medical and in that event you can postpone the medical until CIC asks you . In such a case CIC will when requiring you to submit to a medical exam send you a form IMM1017 which you must take with you to the medical. If you are applying outland you must undergo an upfront medical and in that case you do not need an ID number. The doctor will supply you with a form immediately after the medical which you must then enclose with your application when you submit to to Mississauga. That form will include the identification barcode CIC needs in order to identify your medical results. In the case of an outland application it is the doctor's function to supply that form. Not infrequently doctors and their staff get confused between the various categories of applicants for visas and give out incorrect information. If in your case they have got it wrong you have to argue your case. You can find all this info by googling 'CIC medical requirements for family class applicants'.Finley said:Hi all, I also have a question about the medical. I have read and been told to do the medical up front and before you send off the application so as not to slow it down. But when I rang the Panel Physicians office to make an appointment, they told me I needed to submit the application first and get an I.D number. Has anyone had any trouble like this or can anyone explain it?
I took this quote off of the Cic website.
"undergo a medical examination prior to submitting the application (results are valid for 12 months)"
I am from Wales but did my medical in Canada in April 2014. I see from my file that I paid the panel physician C$200 and a further fee of C$80 for an Xray. I think that was it: C$280, about half what you would have to pay in Ireland (and probably Wales as well). Before you decide what to do have a look back through the pages of the family sponsorship part of this website at the numerous threads concerned with medicals. You need not go back further than the beginning of the summer. You will find posts by one member who argues strongly that upfront medicals are not essential in outland application cases and I think that indeed some outland applicants nowadays get away with it. The worst that is likely to happen if you do not submit to a medical upfront is that your application may be returned to you as incomplete and so result in delay; but if that is not too much of a worry, that is a course you might follow if the issue is important enough to you.Finley said:Thanks wowsers, that was helpful. I am applying outland from Ireland where the medical with chest x-ray will cost 350 euro thats about $500 or more. I am travelling to Canada after I send in the visa and I've read that you can get the medical over there for under $200. Wish it could wait til then.