how was it like in cancun for you?
i'm going in december and staying in a five star all inclusive resort.
what types of activities did you do? by the way i'm a teen so no parties ...
I am going with my familt to the mayan riviera this july, i am younge and i have heard from some of my freinds that have went to mexico that when u are there ther is alot of people who are dangerous ...
I am going to puerta vallarta for spring break and was wondering if anyone could give me any advice on preparations, what to bring etc...(staying in an all inclusive though) I have heard some things ...
If you do get your drinks included in the price, how much roughly was it to get in? Was it cheap drinks or could you get Smirnoff vodka? What kind of beer was it? If drinks were not included in ...
My brother-in-law (a Mexican citizen) is looking to buy beach front property in the Merida area. I am a freelance web designer and I would like to live in the house. I am a US citizen. What do I need ...
Hi, I'm looking for a vacation spot in Mexico or the Caribbean. I'm 33 years old, so I don't want a college spring break type place, but a place to relax with my girlfriend. I ...
I'm looking to purchase a summer home in Mexico. Something family oriented ( we have 3 kids ), rural, country, beautiful views, and cheap or reasonable (nothing over $200K) -=--- any suggestions ...
All my friends are saying it is TOOOO dangerous to drive from Houston to Cancun. Has anyone driven recently? I would enter at Brownsville and work my way down. I would be with my two children ages ...
Why not? They have doctors and medical care in Mexico. For your own safety and depending on how well-controlled your diabetes is you may choose to live in a larger, more metropolitan city as opposed to somewhere more rural.
Charlie
Sure. There are excellent doctors everywhere. You can sign up for the national health ins if you have an FM3 visa. There are also private ins. plans for wealthier people and those who live in areas with lots of gringos and special hospitals used mostly by gringos...but you certainly do not need to do that to get good care.
Edit...IMSS does not cover preexisting conditions for the FIRST year...but they instruct you not to fill in anything in the preexisting part of the form! Anyway, private docs are very cheap compared to the U.S. I have IMSS just in casr of an accident or big illness, but use private docs for ordinarily. You would have no problem doing that. Any medium sized town, or any town near a big city would be fine as there are plenty of good docs...not just in the huge population centers. I live in a tiny town, but 1/2 hr. from a big city with excellent specialists.
Julio_S
of course you can, but before you do please do some reading because you don't seem to know the first thing about the country you are planning to move to.
tats
you should really think about moving to mexico... i'm a mexican and i don't like the medical treatments or hospitals... think about it.
Hanna
Uhhh, yeahhh. I would do some research if I were you before trying to move to a country you don't know much about.
marci knows best
There are world class doctors in cities like Guadalajara, Mexico City and Monterrey. I would expect PV to have some very good doctors as well. Many have trained in Europe or the U.S.
Someone mentioned the national health insurance IMSS, after you get your permanent Visa (FM3). It doesn't cover preexisting conditions for 3 years after you apply.
Get a copy of "Head for Mexico" by Don Adams for some common sense information about living in Mexico.
βΰΉ AllisOon βΰΉ β₯Ε¦ΠΊΧ₯
si.. claroOO.. aqui hay muy buenos medicos tambien ^^