Singapore medical visa for US citizen
Can US citizen get medication/emergency surgical procedure under tourist visa?
visas us-citizens health singapore
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Can US citizen get medication/emergency surgical procedure under tourist visa?
visas us-citizens health singapore
New contributor
1
Do you want to get a "medical visa" or you want to have a surgery under tourist visa?
– Dirty-flow
yesterday
1
@Dirty-flow It doesn't really matter, in either case they don't need a visa.
– drat
yesterday
Is this about "can I get medical services?" (yes, of course) or "how does payment for medical services work?"
– Hilmar
yesterday
add a comment |
Can US citizen get medication/emergency surgical procedure under tourist visa?
visas us-citizens health singapore
New contributor
Can US citizen get medication/emergency surgical procedure under tourist visa?
visas us-citizens health singapore
visas us-citizens health singapore
New contributor
New contributor
edited yesterday
Community♦
1
1
New contributor
asked yesterday
shahedshahed
161
161
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New contributor
1
Do you want to get a "medical visa" or you want to have a surgery under tourist visa?
– Dirty-flow
yesterday
1
@Dirty-flow It doesn't really matter, in either case they don't need a visa.
– drat
yesterday
Is this about "can I get medical services?" (yes, of course) or "how does payment for medical services work?"
– Hilmar
yesterday
add a comment |
1
Do you want to get a "medical visa" or you want to have a surgery under tourist visa?
– Dirty-flow
yesterday
1
@Dirty-flow It doesn't really matter, in either case they don't need a visa.
– drat
yesterday
Is this about "can I get medical services?" (yes, of course) or "how does payment for medical services work?"
– Hilmar
yesterday
1
1
Do you want to get a "medical visa" or you want to have a surgery under tourist visa?
– Dirty-flow
yesterday
Do you want to get a "medical visa" or you want to have a surgery under tourist visa?
– Dirty-flow
yesterday
1
1
@Dirty-flow It doesn't really matter, in either case they don't need a visa.
– drat
yesterday
@Dirty-flow It doesn't really matter, in either case they don't need a visa.
– drat
yesterday
Is this about "can I get medical services?" (yes, of course) or "how does payment for medical services work?"
– Hilmar
yesterday
Is this about "can I get medical services?" (yes, of course) or "how does payment for medical services work?"
– Hilmar
yesterday
add a comment |
1 Answer
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I'm not sure whether you want to travel to Singapore especially for a medical procedure or whether you are worried that you might need to get medical help while on a tourist visa. In either case, it shouldn't matter in your case:
As a US-citizen, you do not require a visa to enter Singapore. You will get a stamp in your passport at arrival with either 30 or 90 days of stay. As long as you don't intend to work in Singapore, this is not bound to a specific purpose, so you can use that to visit a hospital. If you want or need more than the days given to you, you can apply for an extension on medical grounds.
It is fairly common for people to travel to Singapore to seek medical treatment, so most hospitals (here are two examples) will have departments dealing with foreign patients. So if you are unsure, you could contact the hospital in question and they should assist you.
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I'm not sure whether you want to travel to Singapore especially for a medical procedure or whether you are worried that you might need to get medical help while on a tourist visa. In either case, it shouldn't matter in your case:
As a US-citizen, you do not require a visa to enter Singapore. You will get a stamp in your passport at arrival with either 30 or 90 days of stay. As long as you don't intend to work in Singapore, this is not bound to a specific purpose, so you can use that to visit a hospital. If you want or need more than the days given to you, you can apply for an extension on medical grounds.
It is fairly common for people to travel to Singapore to seek medical treatment, so most hospitals (here are two examples) will have departments dealing with foreign patients. So if you are unsure, you could contact the hospital in question and they should assist you.
add a comment |
I'm not sure whether you want to travel to Singapore especially for a medical procedure or whether you are worried that you might need to get medical help while on a tourist visa. In either case, it shouldn't matter in your case:
As a US-citizen, you do not require a visa to enter Singapore. You will get a stamp in your passport at arrival with either 30 or 90 days of stay. As long as you don't intend to work in Singapore, this is not bound to a specific purpose, so you can use that to visit a hospital. If you want or need more than the days given to you, you can apply for an extension on medical grounds.
It is fairly common for people to travel to Singapore to seek medical treatment, so most hospitals (here are two examples) will have departments dealing with foreign patients. So if you are unsure, you could contact the hospital in question and they should assist you.
add a comment |
I'm not sure whether you want to travel to Singapore especially for a medical procedure or whether you are worried that you might need to get medical help while on a tourist visa. In either case, it shouldn't matter in your case:
As a US-citizen, you do not require a visa to enter Singapore. You will get a stamp in your passport at arrival with either 30 or 90 days of stay. As long as you don't intend to work in Singapore, this is not bound to a specific purpose, so you can use that to visit a hospital. If you want or need more than the days given to you, you can apply for an extension on medical grounds.
It is fairly common for people to travel to Singapore to seek medical treatment, so most hospitals (here are two examples) will have departments dealing with foreign patients. So if you are unsure, you could contact the hospital in question and they should assist you.
I'm not sure whether you want to travel to Singapore especially for a medical procedure or whether you are worried that you might need to get medical help while on a tourist visa. In either case, it shouldn't matter in your case:
As a US-citizen, you do not require a visa to enter Singapore. You will get a stamp in your passport at arrival with either 30 or 90 days of stay. As long as you don't intend to work in Singapore, this is not bound to a specific purpose, so you can use that to visit a hospital. If you want or need more than the days given to you, you can apply for an extension on medical grounds.
It is fairly common for people to travel to Singapore to seek medical treatment, so most hospitals (here are two examples) will have departments dealing with foreign patients. So if you are unsure, you could contact the hospital in question and they should assist you.
answered yesterday
dratdrat
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shahed is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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1
Do you want to get a "medical visa" or you want to have a surgery under tourist visa?
– Dirty-flow
yesterday
1
@Dirty-flow It doesn't really matter, in either case they don't need a visa.
– drat
yesterday
Is this about "can I get medical services?" (yes, of course) or "how does payment for medical services work?"
– Hilmar
yesterday