Crazycell bu konuda bilgin olabileceğini düşünüyorum. Görüşmeden önce medical examde sanırım bir çok aşı yapılıyor. Sanırım eğer aşı kartı olanlar bu aşı kartını götürdüğü zaman yapılmış olan aşılar tekrar yapılıyormu orada? Eğer Türkiyede özel sağlık sigortamız varsa ve bu biz aşıları yaptırıp aşı kartımızı götürsek olur mu? Sağlık sigprtamız bu aşıları karşılıyorsa yaptırsak acaba kabul ederler mi? Biliyorsun medical exam ücreti çokta düşük değil 300 dola rile 400 dolar arası değişen fiyat ödeyen arkadaşlarımız var. Böylelikle kendi özel sigortamızdan yaptırdığımız aşılar ile belki bu ücret daha az ödenebilir. Madem özel sağlık sigortasına bu kadar ücret ödüyoruz bu açıdan faydası olur ama işte Unganlardı galiba onlar bunu kabul ediyor mu?
cdc in web sayfasında da şöyle bir bilhgi var:
What are the new vaccination criteria for U.S. immigration?
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) regulations require that all immigrant applicants receive a medical exam. During the exam, applicants are required to show proof that they have received certain vaccines. If an applicant does not have proof of having received the required vaccines, the law states that the vaccines must be given at the time of the medical exam.
CDC has new vaccination criteria to help decide which vaccines should be required as part of the immigration process. CDC will use these criteria at regular periods, as needed, for vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) for the general U.S. public. This will determine which vaccines will be required for U.S. immigration.
The criteria are:
The vaccine must be age-appropriate* for the immigrant applicant
The vaccine must protect against a disease that has the potential to cause an outbreak.
The vaccine must protect against a disease that has been eliminated or is in the process of being eliminated in the United States.
*ACIP recommends vaccines for a certain age range in the general U.S. public. These ACIP recommendations will be used to decide which vaccines are age-appropriate for the general immigrant population.
These criteria will be applied to the ACIP-recommended vaccines that are not specifically named in immigration law.
If an ACIP-recommended vaccine for the general U.S. population meets these criteria, overseas immigrant applicants will have to receive the vaccine during their immigrant medical exam. Again, the only exception is if an immigrant applicant can show proof of having already received a given vaccine or if the vaccine is not medically advised.
Immigrant applicants who are already in the United States and are changing their visa status to become permanent residents also will be required to receive the same vaccines unless they can show proof that they already received a given vaccine or if the vaccine is not medically advised.
Applicants will need to get only one dose of each vaccine during their medical exam. However, applicants are encouraged to get other doses of a vaccine to finish each series.
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What vaccines are required for U.S. immigration?
At this time,* vaccines for these diseases are currently required for U.S. immigration:
Mumps
Measles
Rubella
Polio
Tetanus and diphtheria
Pertussis
Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib)
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B
Rotavirus
Meningococcal disease
Varicella
Pneumococcal disease
Seasonal influenza
*On December 14, 2009, the human papillomavirus (HPV) and zoster vaccines were removed from the list of required vaccines for immigrant applicants. All other vaccinations on this list remain.
Any future vaccines recommended by ACIP for the general U.S. public will be subject to the new vaccination criteria. If the recommended vaccines fit the new criteria, they will be added to the list of required vaccines for immigrant applicants.