How We Work

A patient-side process before you choose a hospital in China.

If you already have serious questions, this is how we help turn them into clearer answers before you commit time, money, or travel.

Four stages designed to reduce wrong-route risk.

The goal is simple: clarify whether China deserves deeper comparison before a patient spends serious time, money, or travel effort.

Step 01

Share the case

You send the diagnosis, records, current treatment, timing pressure, and the decision your family is trying to make. No travel commitment, no sales pressure. We respond within 24 hours.

  • What decision are you facing?
  • What records already exist?
  • 24-hour response
Step 02

Free case review

Our internal medical expert group reviews your current situation and treatment expectations, then assesses whether China's medical resources can meet your needs. We give you a response within 48 hours. Why Us

  • Current situation review
  • Treatment expectations
  • China route feasibility
  • 48-hour response
Step 03

Independent research

China has thousands of hospitals and millions of healthcare professionals. Our medical expert team screens options across multiple dimensions, then narrows the route to the three most suitable hospitals and three to five doctors in Shanghai, Beijing, or other relevant centers. We provide the assessment within one week. How we evaluate

  • Doctor, department, and hospital comparison
  • Records and access questions
  • One-week assessment
Step 04

Custom coordination

If a route is selected, optional paid support follows the case. Some families need translation and records support; others need appointment planning or China-side communication. The scope is tailored, not packaged.

  • Records and translation
  • Appointment planning
  • Follow-up coordination

What the research is meant to answer.

China's medical system is large, fast-moving, and uneven by specialty. The report does not ask whether China is generally good; it asks which route, if any, fits your case. Why China

Doctor shortlist

Which three to five doctors have relevant specialty focus, case experience, realistic scheduling, and cost signals for this diagnosis?

Hospital shortlist

Which three hospitals or departments appear most suitable, including international-service capacity, JCI or comparable accreditation, and international patient pathways?

Records pathway

What records, imaging, pathology materials, translations, or summaries are needed before provider contact?

Route realism

Does the expected access, cost, timing, communication, and follow-up burden make sense?

How paid work is priced.

We discuss scope before any paid work begins, so families understand what they are paying for and why.

Independent research From USD 500

For cases that need doctor, department, hospital, access, and route-fit research. Final pricing depends on case complexity, specialty, number of options reviewed, and whether expert-reference coordination is needed.

Custom coordination Case-based quote

Optional support is scoped by modules such as records preparation, translation, appointment planning, China-side communication, local logistics, or follow-up coordination.

No paid research or coordination starts until the scope, expected deliverables, and fee logic are clear.

Paid support, tailored to the case.

Some cases need China-side coordination. Others only need remote expert review of records, imaging, or pathology. We scope support around the decision your case requires, not around fixed packages.

Remote expert review

For families who cannot travel, we can organize China-based specialists to review pathology, imaging, and medical records remotely and provide reference opinions.

Before treatment

Custom preparation can include provider screening, records organization, translation, and travel-readiness planning.

During treatment

Paid coordination can cover appointments, communication support, records flow, and China-side practical assistance.

After treatment

Follow-up services can be arranged around record organization, communication, and practical next steps after return.

What this can look like in practice.

These are illustrative route patterns, not testimonials or outcome claims. They show how a case moves from uncertainty to a more concrete decision.

Process 01

Long wait, unclear next step

A family facing a delayed specialist visit uses the free review to decide whether a China comparison is worth researching at all.

Process 02

Known diagnosis, difficult route choice

Paid research compares department strength, doctor fit, records requirements, timing, and practical access before hospital contact.

Process 03

Route selected, support needed

Coordination is scoped around what the case actually requires: records, translation, appointments, local planning, or follow-up.