Learn how MediGuide China builds planning content, compares sources, and decides what information is stable enough to publish.
Foreign patients often read broad claims about treatment in China without knowing where those claims came from, how recent they are, or whether they describe a public hospital, an international department, or a private workflow.
This page explains how MediGuide China approaches research so readers can judge the limits of the content more clearly.
Our research is built around practical planning questions, such as:
We focus more on patient decisions than on generic medical tourism claims.
We try to rely first on sources that are closest to real patient operations. Those may include:
We do not treat one marketing article or one social post as enough evidence for a strong operational claim.
Cost information is one of the most unstable parts of this topic. For that reason, MediGuide China treats public cost content as planning guidance rather than a hospital quote.
When writing about price, we try to separate:
If a price is too dependent on hospital choice, pathology, implants, medication, room type, or follow-up decisions, we try not to present it as a precise public number.
Hospital comparison content is not meant to declare one hospital universally "best." The point is to help patients compare:
For common cases, the right question is often not "Which hospital has the strongest reputation?" but "Which hospital path is realistic for this patient from abroad?"
We try to avoid publishing content that:
Medical travel information changes. Hospital workflows, payment methods, registration systems, and public service pages can all change over time.
Because of that, we expect to recheck important public-facing guidance and revise pages when:
If you want to ask how a page was researched or think a page should be corrected, contact:
Last updated: June 8, 2026