Physical (medical) examination of American immigrants should be done in five aspects:
First, routine physical examination
Including vision, height, weight, eyes, ears, nose, throat, limbs, heart, lungs, abdomen, lymph nodes, skin and so on. The physical examination also includes an assessment of mental condition.
Second, tuberculin skin test (TST)
All applicants over 2 years old need to be tested for tuberculosis. Applicants aged 2- 14 use skin tests, and the report takes 2 to 3 days to get the results.
Third, X-ray chest X-ray
All applicants need to do it, but there is a difference between applicants below 10 and those above 10. Applicants under 10 need to take two X-rays at different positions (back, front and side); /kloc-applicants over 0/0 years old take X-rays (back and front).
Fourth, blood test.
In addition to routine blood tests, doctors will also check for infectious diseases such as hepatitis B. For applicants over the age of 15, it is used to check whether there is "HIV" and "syphilis". If the doctor suspects that people under the age of 14 may be infected with these viruses, the doctor can check this.
Fifth, make up the "immune vaccine"
Immigration law requires applicants to have more than a dozen vaccine records, including: whooping cough, tetanus and diphtheria, polio, rubella, measles, mumps, epidemic encephalitis, Haemophilus influenzae, hepatitis B, hepatitis A, chickenpox, pneumonia, rotavirus, influenza vaccine and so on. These vaccines have different requirements in some age groups, and not all vaccines should be vaccinated. If you have finished the vaccination before going abroad (as evidenced by the immunization record), or the blood test shows that you have enough antibodies and enough immunity, both of which can prove that you don't need to take additional vaccination.