What hospital matching usually considers

Useful matching is not about generating a long list of hospitals. It is about identifying which routes are actually more workable for your case and travel situation.

Specialty fit

Which hospitals or departments are more practical for your diagnosis, symptom area, or screening need.

Hospital model

Whether a public hospital international department, private international hospital, or specialty provider is the better route.

Timing and travel

How soon you need to come to Shanghai, whether repeat visits are possible, and how much support you may need.

Budget and privacy

Whether you prioritize lower cost, smoother service, stronger privacy, or faster scheduling access.

What to prepare before submitting

Your file set does not need to be perfect, but the more focused and organized it is, the easier it is to identify a practical route.

  • Diagnosis summary or symptom overview: This helps clarify the likely specialty direction first.
  • Recent records: Reports, scans, pathology, or a medication list can help explain the current situation faster.
  • Expected travel window and support needs: For example translation, on-site help, or inpatient coordination.
  • Your priorities or comparison concerns: Such as speed, budget, privacy, or English-language support.

What you usually receive first

The first response should reduce uncertainty and make the next action clearer, rather than leave you with too many disconnected choices.

Initial shortlist

You usually receive 2 to 4 more workable hospital routes instead of an overwhelming number of options.

Comparison notes

Routes are usually compared by language support, process complexity, timing rhythm, and budget level.

Boundary reminder

You receive a reminder of coordination scope and what remains under hospital medical responsibility.

Suggested next step

You can then decide whether to proceed, compare more, or prepare additional records before moving forward.

Typical matching sequence

Most patients move through the following four steps before deciding whether to proceed with a hospital route.

01

Submit information

Share your case summary, current records, timeline, and the main points you want compared.

02

Route review

We assess specialty fit, hospital model, travel practicality, and support needs.

03

Receive shortlist

You get a smaller set of more practical hospital options with clearer notes on the key differences.

04

Decide next move

You decide whether to move ahead, prepare more records first, or continue comparing routes.

Need help identifying the right hospital route first?

We can help narrow your options based on your records, language needs, and travel timeline before you commit to a route.

  • We work with licensed and compliant hospitals only
  • Medical fees are paid directly to the hospital
  • We provide non-clinical coordination support only