WhatsApp consultation with a reply within 24 hours

Non-Clinical International Patient Coordination

Need care at a top Shanghai hospital?
We help you clarify the best route first

Hospital matching guidance within 24 hours · Hospital fees paid directly · End-to-end non-clinical coordination

24h

first reply

Most intakes receive an initial coordination reply within one business day.

Non-clinical

coordination only

We clarify hospital paths, records, and travel support — not medical judgment.

Direct billing

hospital fees only

Registration, diagnostics, treatment, and medication fees are billed by the hospital directly.

Real videos

filmed by patients

US/UK patients: Unscripted Shanghai hospital tours & cost comparisons.
Watch the videos →

Why patients trust our coordination model

We focus on clarity, transparency, and realistic support for international patients entering an unfamiliar healthcare system.

Qualified hospitals only

We prioritize established hospitals and formal international care pathways rather than informal referrals.

Transparent billing

Hospital treatment fees are charged by the hospital. Our role is non-clinical coordination and support.

Confidential records

Your medical information is shared only with authorized providers involved in your case and only within your consent.

Choose your starting point

Most patients do not need more marketing. They need to know what to do next. Start from the scenario that matches you.

I already have a diagnosis

Share your records for coordination review and receive suitable hospital pathways based on department strength, timeline, and travel needs.

I need tests before treatment

We help you understand how specialist consultations, diagnostic workups, and follow-up scheduling usually happen in Shanghai.

I want to compare hospitals

Compare public international departments, premium private hospitals, and specialty institutions based on fit, language support, and process.

I need visa, translation, and accompaniment

Plan the non-clinical side of your trip, including documents, interpretation, airport pickup, accommodation, and on-site support.

What happens after you contact us

A clearer process reduces hesitation. Here are the four steps most patients go through first.

Typical coordination sequence

01

Submit

Share your goal, timing, and contact details so we can understand your starting point.

02

Review

We look at your records, likely specialty, and travel timing to see which route may fit best.

03

Reply

You receive likely pathways, preparation priorities, and the next recommended step.

04

Proceed

If the route fits, we continue with records organization, translation, and travel support.

Want to compare public, international, and private hospital routes first? See the comparison page

What you usually receive first

  • A more likely hospital route for your case.
  • The next missing documents or details to prepare.
  • Clearer fee boundaries and support scope.
  • An urgency reminder to contact the hospital directly if needed.
Will my records be forwarded without my approval?

No. Records are only shared within the scope you approve and only when that next coordination step requires it.

Do I pay hospital fees to you?

No. Registration, diagnostics, treatment, and medication fees are paid to the hospital directly.

Do you promise treatment results?

No. We explain routes and support coordination, but diagnosis, treatment decisions, and outcomes remain with licensed providers.

Can I pause if my travel plan changes?

Yes. If your plan changes, you can pause coordination and limit or stop further record sharing.

Start patient intake

Useful planning pages before you decide

Some patients need a form right away. Others first want a city overview, a realistic hospital-day picture, or a clearer matching path. Start with the page that removes your biggest uncertainty.

Why Patients Choose Shanghai

See why Shanghai often works well for international patients comparing hospital depth, language support, and care pathways.

Read the city overview

Medical Intake

Understand what information patients usually prepare before any hospital matching, scheduling, or travel coordination begins.

See what intake includes

Request Hospital Matching

Already know your likely specialty? See what we usually compare before suggesting public, private, or specialty routes.

Explore matching

A Real Day at a Shanghai Hospital

Preview the practical rhythm of registration, consultation, testing, payment, and report collection for first-time visitors.

See the hospital-day guide

Choose the hospital route that fits you

Most international patients first need route clarity: public, private, or specialty-focused. Start with the model that matches your priority.

Public international departments

Often best for patients who already have a diagnosis and want access to strong tertiary specialists with more budget-sensitive pricing.

Top specialists More navigation
Compare hospital types

Premium private hospitals

Often better for patients who prioritize stronger English support, smoother experience, faster coordination, and added privacy.

English-friendly Smoother flow
See route differences

Specialty-focused institutions

Useful when the care need is already specific, such as oncology, dentistry, rehabilitation, health screening, or TCM.

Targeted fit Specific needs
Ask for route guidance

Ready to plan the next practical step?

If you already have records, a likely specialty, or a clear timeline, the best next move is usually a patient intake rather than more browsing.

Step 01

Share the basics

Tell us your goal, timeline, records status, and preferred contact method so we can assess the situation.

Step 02

Receive a realistic first reply

We usually reply with likely route options, preparation guidance, and what needs clarification before travel planning goes further.

Step 03

Proceed only if it fits

If the route makes sense, we can continue with records organization, translation, logistics, and practical support.

This service is for non-emergency coordination only. For urgent medical issues, contact a hospital directly.