Hi guys,
Sorry if I'm wrong,
Usually these NCD diseases ( Hypertension, Hyperlipidemia , Hyperglycaemia ) as these diseases do not communicate through person to person ( non communicable diseases ), your medicals will be considered if there's abnormality in the results. Main aim is to check VDRL, HIV, HEPATITIS, and chest X-Ray for tuberculosis. Any malignancies can be suspected through difference in counts and physical examination.
Note: this is just my opinion, as i have done screening for work permit in Maldives for 6 years, 2009 to 2012, 2013 (3 months ), 2014 ( 5 months ), 2015 to 2017 ( July 10th resigned )
Expected visa by August 7th ,or 14th August.
So the conclusion is we never stopped anyone with BP, sugar, cholesterol abnormalities, but we stopped chest x ray abnormality, HEPATITIS, HIV, and VDRL.
So if you are in good health, go ahead, medicals will be fine. Drink more water during the day of test and before day to keep the false positive results away for safe.
For example :
What diseases prevent non-U.S. citizens from coming to the United States?
Diseases that can prevent entry to the U.S. fall into three categories:
Any of the following diseases: active tuberculosis, infectious syphilis, gonorrhea, infectious leprosy, chancroid, lymphogranuloma venereum, granuloma inguinale, and HIV infection. (HIV infection will be removed on January 4, 2010)Quarantinable diseases designated by any Presidential Executive Order. The current list of diseases includes cholera, diphtheria, infectious tuberculosis, plague, smallpox, yellow fever, viral hemorrhagic fevers, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), and influenza caused by novel or re-emergent influenza (pandemic flu).Diseases reportable as a public health emergency of international concern to the World Health Organization under the International Health Regulations of 2005. These diseases currently include: polio, smallpox, SARS, pandemic flu and other public health emergencies of international concern.
HIV infection will be removed as a communicable disease of public health significance effective January 4, 2010. At that time, HIV infection will not be used to keep people from entering the United States.
All the best