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J-1 WAIVERS FOR PHYSICIANS DUE TO EXCEPTIONAL HARDSHIP


Physicians who receive clinical medical residency training in the U.S. pursuant to a J-1 exchange visitor visa are required to return to their home country for two years before they are eligible to apply for an H-1B visa or permanent residency. J-1 visa physicians need not complete this two-year home requirement if they are approved for a waiver based on demonstrating exceptional hardship to a U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse and/or child.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) looks at these cases from two (2) perspectives:

· Hardship if the U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse and/or child remains in the U.S. while the J-1 visa holder returns to the home country for two years, and

· Hardship if the U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse and/or child accompanies the J-1 visa holder back to the home country for two years.

Therefore, a hardship waiver application must establish that the U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse and/or child will suffer exceptionally as a result of returning to the J-1 visa holder's home country and remaining in the U.S. without the J-1 visa holder for two years.

Some examples of successful hardship claims are:

· Danger to life and well being of the U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse and/or child. This claim is effective if one can prove that the U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse and/or child will face certain harm because of their race, religion, etc. Please note that if a travel warning from the U.S. Department of State has been issued recommending that U.S. citizens and/or permanent residents avoid travel to a particular country, the likelihood of receiving a hardship waiver approval certainly increases.

· An existing health condition and/or disease that would worsen if the U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse and/or child were to live in the J-1 visa holder's home country for two years. This claim usually rests heavily on a lack of adequate medical treatment in the J-1 visa holder's home country and the severity of the health condition and/or disease.

· An interruption in the career of the U.S. citizen or permanent resident spouse, making it difficult to re-enter the field when he/she returns in two years. This claim usually requires evidence that shows that the person's career or field is advancing at such a pace that to leave would cause irreparable harm to the spouse's future in the field.

The significance of a USCIS approved Application to Waive Foreign Residence Requirements is limited to the waiver of the two year home requirement. It does not, however, place the J-1 into a legal nonimmigrant status, nor does it imply authorization to work in the U.S. Upon obtaining this type of waiver, the applicant will be eligible to obtain permanent resident status.







Robert Lubin & Associates, P.C.
505 Huntmar Park Drive,
Suite 315, Herndon,
VA 20170
Phone: (703) 883-0870
Fax: (703) 883-0861
rlapc@rlapc.com

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