
“Is it true they’re no longer admitting anyone with diabetes? What about my brother, I think he’s obese?” a client asked during a recent consultation about filing an immigration petition for her brother, who is a U.S. citizen.
Familiar story? I’ve heard this question repeatedly since the administration issued guidance directing consular and immigration officers to broaden how they apply medical inadmissibility rules. The guidance requires officers to consider applicants’ health during visa reviews. It applies to most visa categories but will mainly affect people seeking permanent residence in the United States.
Traditionally, officials barred applicants only for communicable diseases of public-health significance or conditions that made them likely to become a “public charge.” There are more to consider now. The new administration guidance instructs consular officers to scrutinize more health conditions when deciding admissibility.
The new approach directs officials to weigh a wider range of health conditions, including chronic, treatable, and noncommunicable illnesses such as cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, cancers, diabetes and metabolic disorders, neurological disorders, and mental health conditions. They must also consider whether those conditions might require medical treatment or use public resources in the United States. The applicant bears the burden of proof. They must show they are unlikely to become primarily dependent on government assistance for subsistence.

How it works
Consular officers review medical exams and case details when assessing admissibility. Under the guidance, they are encouraged to consider whether an applicant’s condition could create a foreseeable burden on public health programs, emergency services, or healthcare systems. Financial capacity and access to insurance can also factor into decisions. That can translate into more visa denials for people with disabilities, chronic conditions, or illnesses that are manageable in routine care but could be costly if complications arise.
Why people are concerned
Advocates and health groups say the policy risks excluding many immigrants who pose little contagion risk and who could live, work, and obtain care in the U.S. They warn it could separate families, deter migrants from seeking preventive care, and stigmatize disability and illness. Civil-rights and immigration lawyers predict lawsuits challenging the guidance’s legal basis and its application, arguing that it expands inadmissibility beyond Congress’s intent and lacks clear standards.
What supporters say
Proponents argue the guidance protects public resources and ensures that immigration decisions account for foreseeable costs to government-funded health programs.
What public needs to watch
Because the guidance gives officers greater discretion, the public must watch how they use it. A narrow interpretation would limit denials to extreme cases. A broad one could bar many people with manageable conditions. To prevent abuse, officials should publish clear criteria, track outcomes, and implement safeguards so discretion doesn’t become a blunt instrument that harms vulnerable people.