Hey all.
I’m in the process of applying for a visa to work in Spain. With respect to the medical certification, my doctor’s office got back to me and said that they require the official WHO definition of “threat to public health” before they will be willing to certify that I am not such a threat. Apparently they looked around, but couldn’t find such a definition. So now I’m tasked with finding this information out and providing my doctor’s office with something official.
I can’t find this definition either. The WHO and IHR (2005) documents I’ve found thus far don’t say “And you’re a threat if….” Moreover, they seem to suggest that threats are something that can change based on new diseases, outbreaks, etc. Such a stance makes perfectly good sense to me. Remember SARS and H1N1? Things happen, times change, drug-resistant microbes appear, what is a risk today might not be a risk tomorrow and vice versa. Yet, my doctor insists on a checklist of conditions. Which brings me to the following:
On the SpainExpat visa page, it says:
Original medical certificate typed on doctor?s stationary verifying that the applicant is free from the following quarantine diseases: yellow fever, cholera, and the plague. The certificate must also certify that the applicant is free of drug addictions and mental illness, with a translation into Spanish .
That looks an awful lot like a list. 😉 Unfortunately “SpainExpat said so” isn’t likely to cut it. So where exactly did that list come from? And if you can provide me with an official link or citation that I can pass along to my doctor, it would be beyond awesome.
Thanks in advance!!