How the change to the United Arab Emirates law on TB affects expatriates
New regulations issued earlier this year regarding visa rules and deportation orders for tuberculosis (TB) sufferers in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) left many residents confused.
In March 2016, the UAE Cabinet issued a decree clarifying rules
on TB, which stated that expatriates with the disease will not
be automatically deported, allowing residents to sponsor spouses
or children with old TB scars.
The issue sparked a flurry of letters and comments from 7DAYS
readers on the topic.
We spoke with Nabeel Al Marhoumi, a public health
consultant at the preventive medicine department at the
Ministry of Health, to get a better idea of how the UAE is dealing with TB.
What is tuberculosis, how is it treated?
Tuberculosis is caused by bacteria (Mycobacterium tuberculosis)
that most often effects lungs. TB is spread from person to
person through the air.
“When people with TB
cough, sneeze or spit, they propel the TB germs into the air.
“A
person needs to inhale only a few of these germs to become
infected.
“TB is treated through a standard
six-month course of four antimicrobial drugs, under supervision
and support by the primary healthcare centres.
How did the UAE law change regarding tuberculosis and visas?
Expatriates will no longer be deported if found to be suffering
from active TB. The person will be reported to primary
healthcare centres and must follow the prescribed treatment.
“TB
patients will be hospitalised until sputum smear results are
negative.
What if a person doesn’t follow the course?
TB patients who don’t follow the treatment course could be
declared medically unfit and be forced to leave the country.
Residents
with active TB will be issued a one-year visa with a medical
certificate that mentions visa renewal subject to treatment.
Why has the law changed?
In the past, expatriates who recognised they had symptoms of TB,
such as fever, coughing up blood, night sweats, and
unintentional weight loss, would choose to not to visit a
doctor.
As they feared deportation and would instead
wait until their visas expired to leave the country. In
such cases, other UAE residents and nationals are at a higher
risk of developing TB.
The new law on TB allows
expatriates, who are diagnosed with TB after entering the
country, to be treated and not fear going to medical clinics and
centres.
If a person’s wife was diagnosed with TB and authorities put a life ban on her records, could a UAE resident apply for her visa and remove the life ban?
Yes, it’s possible. Wives, leading investors and expatriate students enrolled with UAE universities belong to exempt categories and will be allowed to apply for new visas even if they have scars from cured TB.
What are the channels for submitting the application to remove the life ban?
The person’s husband or relative should contact the UAE
immigration department and file certain documents to see if she
would be allowed to the country.
Then, the life ban
might be removed and when she lands in the country she has to
visit the assigned medical centre to follow the treatment
course.
How did the policy change for people with active or old TB who apply for a UAE visa?
The policy is unchanged for people with active or old tuberculosis who are applying for a UAE visa for the first time, except for specific cases such as wives and leading investors.
Does the same policy apply to HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C virus sufferers?
No, it doesn’t. The UAE has a policy of deporting
HIV-positive expatriates. The disease is extremely dangerous and
contagious and the number of HIV sufferers in the country is
extremely low due to the current law regarding this disease.
However,
expatriates with hepatitis C virus might get a residency visa
depending on their occupation.
Source:
7DAYS