Thanks for your inputs!No changes. The same rules still apply.
Your son needs to take and pass the medical.
Thanks for your inputs!No changes. The same rules still apply.
Your son needs to take and pass the medical.
Thanks for your suggestion and guidance!You need to think about whether it makes sense to move even if you overcome medical inadmissibility. Canada has partial Medicare. It has a shortage of many health professionals. Many jobs do not come with extended benefit coverage and if they do have they have caps on how much is covered per year. Hiring additional care for respite or to allow both spouses to work (which is often required to afford to live in Canada) is very expensive and will likely have to be paid out of pocket. Many schools are underfunded so can’t provide enough aides for children who need them. If you are able to access decent healthcare and are able to live off one income, can easily afford to pay for extra care at home, have family support,are able to afford decent schooling, etc. I would really consider why you are moving to Canada and look into whether you have realistic expectations of what Canada can provide for your child. I find many newcomers have unrealistic expectations of what services are available in Canada and often don’t realize that a lot of things are not covered by gvt. In addition things like healthcare and education are stretched to their limits. I could have bought a very nice car for the amount I paid out of pocket for routine physiotherapy over a decade. I was in the fortunate position to be able to access care but many are not so go without. Rates are easily $100 for a half hour in many parts of Canada may be a bit less in less expensive regions but not by much.
Thanks for your suggestion and guidance!
What program are you immigrating through? Your son will have to pass the medical. Most likely he will not so a panel physicians will determine if his medical care will burden the health care system. You will want a Canadian immigration lawyer to work with you and your medical team to outline in detail the care and costs that he will need over the years. Will he require surgery? Medical equipment etc.Hi Everyone,
I have a 12-year-old son with mild cerebral palsy (spastic diplegia). He started walking at the age of 10 and no longer requires medication or specialized equipment. He attends a special school in my home country and participates in a few speech therapy sessions each week. We are currently providing home support to improve his fine motor skills, including toilet training, independent feeding, and dressing.
Has anyone experienced a similar situation and can share insights on the chances of success regarding medical admissibility for Entrepreneur/Business PR?
Thank you!
Hi Everyone,
I have a 12-year-old son with mild cerebral palsy (spastic diplegia). He started walking at the age of 10 and no longer requires medication or specialized equipment. He attends a special school in my home country and participates in a few speech therapy sessions each week. We are currently providing home support to improve his fine motor skills, including toilet training, independent feeding, and dressing.
Has anyone experienced a similar situation and can share insights on the chances of success regarding medical admissibility for Entrepreneur/Business PR?
Thank you!
Since you have been invited, she will need to pass the medical. Best to get a good immigration lawyer now because she will get PFL and most likely be medically inadmissable. Outline her care and medical requirements over the next 10-15 years. Is she in Canada now?Just curious did your son pass the medical test? What happened further?
I am in canada on work permit and i am planning to get my daughter with pr but she has Cerebral palsy. I am concerned if she clears the medical test
She has to pass the medical. No way to bypass. She takes the medical and waits if decision or Procedural Fairness Letter saying inadmissable. Get her doctor reports gathered to prove she will not be a burden on the system.Why will she be medically inadmissible or is there a way to pass this hurdle?
No she is not in canada
It can be dealt and overcome if you can show that you can cover it even just in theory or it doesn't require significant expenses, but you need to demonstrate real paper proof of it all. Private insurance can help, but also your paystubs, list of expenses in a year, etc. Submit a notarized paper that you are ready to cover all the expenses. There are many way to deal with it. It's definitely not a lost cause.My son is suffering from cerebral palsy should my medical will get rejected as I am coming through PNP program.
Although my son need physiotherapy currently only 15 months old.
Please guide me solution.
Ok thank you so much for the helpShe has to pass the medical. No way to bypass. She takes the medical and waits if decision or Procedural Fairness Letter saying inadmissable. Get her doctor reports gathered to prove she will not be a burden on the system.
Make sure you have care in place. Assume private work health insurance will cover some therapy and medication.
