Learn what kinds of sources MediGuide China prefers, where planning claims come from, and how the site handles uncertain information.
Medical travel content can become misleading very quickly when pages mix hospital marketing, generic travel advice, and uncertain patient anecdotes without saying which is which.
MediGuide China uses a source policy so readers can understand what kinds of evidence are more persuasive for planning content and where the limits still are.
We generally give the most weight to sources that are closest to the real patient workflow, such as:
Where general medical explanation is needed, we may also refer to established public medical reference sources.
Some sources can still be useful, but they usually need caution or cross-checking. These may include:
We try not to turn low-confidence sources into strong operational claims by themselves.
If a topic is highly unstable, depends too much on one hospital, or cannot be supported well enough in public, we may do one of three things:
The aim is to avoid publishing confident public advice that cannot be supported reliably.
Many guide pages include a source note. A source note is meant to tell readers what kind of source base informed the page, not to imply that every sentence comes from one single document.
When a page needs direct confirmation from a hospital, that limit should be stated rather than hidden.
If you think a page relies on a weak source base or misstates a hospital workflow, contact:
Last updated: June 8, 2026