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Medicals & Character test for Visa


JJDLmoving

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Hi everyone.

I will be applying for my VISA shortly (Myself, spouse and 3 kids). My question relates to the medicals that need to be completed. 
 

  1. I have type 2 diabetes which i only found out about 6 months ago. It is fairly well controlled and i take medication which costs about R200 a month to control it. 
  2. My 8 year old is diagnosed with AHDH. She is on ritalin 10mg and she has also recently started taking a small amount of Rispedol. She is at a remedial school. 

Would either of these pose a major problem assuming these are out only "issues" and everything healthwize checks out? 

Any advice would be very much appreciated... Thanks. 

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Hi JJDL,

 

My son has Aspbergers and we were called back for a follow up medical with some very specific questions. It was a very nerve wracking time, but everything went through with no problems and in record time.

 

My opinion is that a straight forwards application can be processed on your own (provided you have a lot of patience and a good head for paperwork), but the minute you have "issues" it really is good to use an agent. We used SD_MOA on the forum (Stephen) and he was great. Generally an agent on the forum will have been used by fellow forumites and is subject to close scrutiny so is a pretty safe a reliable bet.

 

Best of luck to you.

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Hi 

@DXB2OZ we are about to face the medicals and our son also has Aspergers, would you mind letting me know what kind of things they asked. Also if you could go back would you take specialist reports with you upfront. I am unsure whether to go in with reports or wait and see how it goes? Any advice would be really appreciated, I am sure you can imagine our nerves 

 

Thank you 

Tracy 

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Hi TracyClare,

 

I seem to recall we took the reports upfront. When we were called back, I was asked questions basically about whether or not he could be self sufficient, such as could he get out of bed without help, or could he feed himself unaided. If you try and keep anything hidden it could be a serious problem. Better to be upfront far as possible.

 

The big question really seemed to be whether or not he would require government support.

 

Best of luck.

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I found the article below in PomsInOz which is a concern for any applicants with a disability. It's confusing as there are many examples of successful applications for those with children who have autism spectrum?

 

I found this on PomsInOz:

 

Australian Immigration Deporting People with a Disability

Advocates say they're seeing nearly a dozen cases a year of disabled people, and sometime their whole families, being denied permanent residency. The government believes their disability will be a burden on the health care system.

Biswajit Banik and Sarmin Sayeed's son Arko was diagnosed with autism as a toddler.

"It wasn't nice when the doctor told you that your son would be different for the rest of his life … he will never be independent," said Sarmin.

The Baniks are both qualified doctors. They moved to Melbourne from Bangladesh in 2007 on an AusAID scholarship.

Nine years later and Sarmin is juggling a PhD in women’s health while working as a General Practitioner in suburban Melbourne.

Her husband Biswajit is a university lecturer at Monash University. Arko is 12 years old.

"Arko has a mild spectrum of autism," Biswajit said. "We cannot change autism but we can minimise its progression"

Autism 1
With the help of special schooling and private tutoring, Arko has made progress. He reads at a year two level and is learning to cook. The Baniks believe he will one day be able to work and live independently.

"It doesn't matter whether he becomes a doctor or an engineer or a chef or a plumber, I don't mind," said Biswajit.

"You work hard, you have your good life, you know end of the day, you know you are a contributing citizen."

Two years ago the Baniks decided to make Australia their home and applied for permanent residency. After a tense eight month wait, their application was rejected for one reason: Arko.

In their rejection letter it said: “the applicant would be likely to require health care or community services during the period specified above…. provision of these services would be likely to result in a significant cost to the Aus community in the areas of health care and/or community services.”

A significant cost is defined as over $40,000 in government services throughout Arko’s life.

"For the hypothetical person that is true, but not for Arko," Biswajit said. "We have demonstrated that we never accessed any state disability services, commonwealth disability services.

"Every time we see a specialist, speech therapist, psychologist, we paid from our own pocket."

The Baniks tried to appeal the decision, but in December last year a government tribunal knocked them back.

They then appealed directly to the immigration minister, Peter Dutton, who has now been considering their case for nine months.

"If the honorable minister makes the decision not in our favour then we need to leave this country in 28 days," Biswajit said.

"So, it put us into a lot of uncertainties. We work in a pretty demanding job ... this is actually taking toll on my life, I have, I can't take it anymore."

Autism 3
The practice of deporting disabled people is more common that you would think. President of the National Ethnic Disability Alliance Suresh Rajan says he sees two to three new cases every month.

"We have a person who has a PhD in men's health…. and she's a practicing general practitioner. They are two people who are making a massive contribution to the Australian society.

"What we're looking at there is the commoditisation of a person with disability. We are breaking down a person to a number and that is completely inappropriate."

Under Australian law the migration act is exempt from the disability discrimination act. The immigration department says this policy is not discriminatory towards disabled people as all applicants must cost the taxpayer less than $40,000 in health care.

"We've probably dealt with something in the vicinity of about 18 to 20 cases in the last two years and in not one of those cases has it come under the threshold of $40,000," Suresh said.

The Banik family have found themselves at the centre of a growing movement - with hundreds of people joining protests around Melbourne asking the Immigration Minister to let them stay.

More than 37,000 people signed an online petition to help the family, with Sarmin saying shee "actually didn't believe" that so many would get behind it and support them.

While The Feed was filming with the Banik family, they received some live changing news from their lawyer.

"Minister Peter Dutton actually approved our primary residency, it was too good to be true," Bisjawit said, tearful.

Finally we got this to stay in Australia permanently for my son, you know, this huge struggle we had but at the end, Australia listened to us. That is unbelievable."

For the Baniks this was a good outcome. But Suresh Rajan says many more will never experience this moment.
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"For the hypothetical person that is true, but not for Arko," Biswajit said. "We have demonstrated that we never accessed any state disability services, commonwealth disability services.

"Every time we see a specialist, speech therapist, psychologist, we paid from our own pocket."

 

Isn't that a bit of a spin statement?? If they never had PR, the how would they have gotten the state to pay for any medical expenses??

 

If my question is negative, in an overly positively story, I apologise. Reading the PP's State of Capture report has my blood boiling this evening.

 

@JJDLmoving, you circumstances don't stop anyone in your family from being independent, I think your application will be fine. If you don't ask, you will never know, so just go for it! ^_^

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