BEFORE YOU READ THIS BEAR IN MIND THAT THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE, I AM NOT A LAWYER, I AM NOT AN IMMIGRATION CONSULTANT SO PLEASE DON'T BOTHER ASKING ME TO PM YOU OR ASKING ME FOR LEGAL ADVICE: I WILL NOT ANSWER BECAUSE I AM NOT QUALIFIED TO DO SO. THIS IS WHAT I HAVE FOUND AND MY ASSESSMENT OF WHAT IT MEANS.
Howdy. I landed as a Permenant Resident on Sunday October 23rd, 2022. I'm literally in Canada for 5 days; land and get PR and see my brother, then fly home, work/save and rid myself of stuff...
In the landing process the border agent highligthed the Section 32 Medical Surveillance 2.02 part of my COPR document. Now, I've passed 2 medicals here in the UK, one of which included a 3 part TB sputum test which came back negative and a consult with a chest specialist who said that what he saw wasn't troubling him and gave me the all clear.
The border agent gave me a form and told me I had to get a medical done as a follow up to make sure that I didn't have latent/asymptomatic TB.
This was unexpected and I was pulling my hair out panicking about whether I'd need to have yet another medical while I was over here and how that would impact my PR then I did what I always do: I researched the issue and think I've found a solution.
This is the link/page in question on the IRCC's website about medical surveillance: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/medical-police/medical-exams/medical-surveillance.html#tuberculosis
About a third of the way down this page is this littel gem:
Remember, I AM NOT A LAWYER so do not take this as legal advice; it is just my read of the situation based on the information provided the Canadian government's own website. If you're in any doubt consult a lawyer or immigration consultant yourself (which is NOT me).
All this being said and all caveats being included herein I still expect to see reply after reply along the lines of "Hello sir, I am so and so from such and such and am having the same situation. please advice..."
I won't because I'm not qualified to so don't ask . However, I hope this is right, makes sense and can help people. If I'm wrong then please do let me know as it definitely pertains to my own current situation and the more you know the more you can get right!
Howdy. I landed as a Permenant Resident on Sunday October 23rd, 2022. I'm literally in Canada for 5 days; land and get PR and see my brother, then fly home, work/save and rid myself of stuff...
In the landing process the border agent highligthed the Section 32 Medical Surveillance 2.02 part of my COPR document. Now, I've passed 2 medicals here in the UK, one of which included a 3 part TB sputum test which came back negative and a consult with a chest specialist who said that what he saw wasn't troubling him and gave me the all clear.
The border agent gave me a form and told me I had to get a medical done as a follow up to make sure that I didn't have latent/asymptomatic TB.
This was unexpected and I was pulling my hair out panicking about whether I'd need to have yet another medical while I was over here and how that would impact my PR then I did what I always do: I researched the issue and think I've found a solution.
This is the link/page in question on the IRCC's website about medical surveillance: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/medical-police/medical-exams/medical-surveillance.html#tuberculosis
About a third of the way down this page is this littel gem:
Now, as mentioned in block capitals at the head of this post I AM NOT A LAWYER, I am just like you, going through the process as best I can but I believe this means if you're in a similar position to me, ie: soft landing with COPR on a brief visit to activate, staying in a hotel or AirBnb and then returning home, you can do as this passage says and disregard the form. It may be a formality but not directly applicable if you're not settling on this visit and have no long term address (I'm in BC at the moment but will be moving to ON so it would make no sense to get a medical in BC...)."If you were given a document at the port of entry telling you to report to your provincial or territorial public health authority in Canada within 7 or 30 days after arriving in Canada, you can disregard it. You only need to provide IRCC with your contact information when you have a home address and phone number in Canada."
Remember, I AM NOT A LAWYER so do not take this as legal advice; it is just my read of the situation based on the information provided the Canadian government's own website. If you're in any doubt consult a lawyer or immigration consultant yourself (which is NOT me).
All this being said and all caveats being included herein I still expect to see reply after reply along the lines of "Hello sir, I am so and so from such and such and am having the same situation. please advice..."
I won't because I'm not qualified to so don't ask . However, I hope this is right, makes sense and can help people. If I'm wrong then please do let me know as it definitely pertains to my own current situation and the more you know the more you can get right!