Your First 72 Hours in China for Medical Treatment: What Actually Happens After You Land
You've done the research. You've weighed the options. You've decided that traveling to China for medical treatment makes sense for your situation — whether it's the cost savings, access to a specific procedure, or a surgeon whose outcomes speak for themselves. But now comes the part that keeps people up at night: what actually happens when you get there?
I get it. The unknown is always scarier than the reality. So let me walk you through exactly what your first 72 hours look like — step by step, hour by hour — so you can stop imagining worst-case scenarios and start seeing just how manageable this actually is.
Before You Land: A Quick Note
This article picks up the moment your plane touches down. If you haven't yet sorted your visa, medical records translation, or travel essentials, check out our pre-travel checklist first. It covers everything from what documents to bring to what medications you can carry through customs.
The short version: if you're working with a coordination service like OrientHealthLink, most of the pre-arrival logistics — hospital appointment scheduling, document translation, and airport transfer arrangements — are handled before you even board the plane. You'll land with a clear schedule already in place.
Hour 0–6: Landing, Airport, and Transfer
Touching Down
Most international flights from the US arrive at either Beijing Capital International (PEK), Shanghai Pudong (PVG), or Guangzhou Baiyun (CAN). You'll likely land in the morning or early afternoon, depending on your route.
Here's what happens immediately:
- Immigration and customs: You'll go through passport control, which typically takes 20–45 minutes. Have your visa and entry card ready. Officers may ask the purpose of your visit — "medical treatment" is perfectly acceptable and common.
- Luggage claim: Standard international baggage claim. Nothing unusual here.
- Meeting your driver: When you exit arrivals, your designated driver or coordinator will be waiting with a sign showing your name. If OrientHealthLink is handling your logistics, this person speaks English and has your full itinerary.
The Drive to Your Accommodation
Depending on which city and hospital you're heading to, the drive ranges from 30 minutes to an hour. Your driver or coordinator will typically:
- Hand you a local SIM card or portable WiFi device (pre-arranged)
- Confirm your schedule for the next day
- Point out landmarks and basic orientation along the way
- Answer any immediate questions you have
Pro tip: Don't try to do anything medical on arrival day. You've just been on a 12–15 hour flight. Your body needs rest, and Chinese hospitals won't schedule consultations for jet-lagged patients anyway — doctors want you coherent and rested for accurate assessments.
Checking Into Your Hotel or Apartment
Most medical travelers stay in one of three options:
- Hospital-adjacent hotel: Within walking distance of the hospital. Practical, if not glamorous.
- Serviced apartment: Popular for patients expecting a stay longer than a week. Comes with a kitchen and more space.
- Hospital international patient ward: Some top-tier hospitals like Peking Union, West China Hospital, or Zhongshan Hospital have dedicated international floors. You'd stay here only after admission.
Your coordinator will have pre-arranged accommodation based on your treatment timeline and preferences. Check in, shower, eat something, and sleep. That's your only job for the next several hours.
Hour 6–24: Settling In and Your First Hospital Visit
Morning of Day 1
After a night's rest (or at least a solid attempt at one — jet lag is real), your day begins around 8:00–9:00 AM. Here's the typical flow:
- Breakfast: Your hotel likely offers both Western and Chinese options. Eat well — you may need to fast for certain blood tests later.
- Coordinator pickup: Your English-speaking coordinator arrives at your hotel to accompany you to the hospital.
- Travel to hospital: Usually 10–20 minutes if accommodation was chosen strategically.
Hospital Registration and Orientation
This is where things feel different from home. Chinese hospitals are busy. Even the international departments move with a certain efficiency that might feel brisk compared to American healthcare environments. But here's the thing — your coordinator handles the bureaucracy.
What registration involves:
- Creating your patient profile in the hospital's system
- Submitting your translated medical records and imaging
- Paying an initial registration/consultation fee (usually 300–800 RMB, roughly $40–$110)
- Receiving your patient card (a physical card you'll use throughout your stay)
If you're curious about how the payment system works — deposits, refund policies, and accepted payment methods — we've covered it in detail in our guide on how payments work at Chinese hospitals.
Your First Consultation
After registration, you'll typically see your doctor the same morning. Yes — the same day. No three-week waiting period.
Here's what to expect:
- Duration: 20–45 minutes for an initial consultation
- Language: Your coordinator interprets in real-time. Some senior physicians at international departments speak English, but don't count on it for complex medical discussions.
- What the doctor does: Reviews your records, performs a physical examination, asks detailed questions about your medical history, and outlines what tests they want to run.
- What you should do: Ask every question you have. Bring a written list if it helps. There's no such thing as a stupid question when you've flown 7,000 miles for an answer.
After the consultation, you'll receive a testing schedule — usually starting the next morning.
Hour 24–48: Testing Day
Why So Many Tests?
Here's something that surprises many American patients: Chinese hospitals will re-run most tests, even if you bring recent results from home. This isn't about doubting your US doctors — it's about:
- Ensuring results are current (within 1–2 weeks)
- Using their own lab standards for treatment planning
- Getting baseline measurements on their equipment for post-treatment comparison
- Liability and surgical safety protocols
What Testing Day Looks Like
You'll typically need to fast from the night before (no food after 10 PM, water only until 6 AM). Your morning schedule might look like this:
| Time | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 7:00 AM | Blood draw (fasting panel, CBC, metabolic, specific markers) | 15 min |
| 7:30 AM | Urine sample | 5 min |
| 8:00 AM | ECG / Chest X-ray | 20 min |
| 8:30 AM | Breakfast break (you can eat now) | 30 min |
| 9:00 AM | CT scan or MRI (procedure-specific) | 30–60 min |
| 10:30 AM | Specialist-specific tests (varies by condition) | Varies |
The efficiency factor: What might take 2–3 separate appointments across multiple weeks in the US often gets done in a single morning in China. The hospital coordinates everything sequentially so you're moving from one test to the next without going home in between.
Afternoon: Free Time or Additional Consultations
Most test results come back within 4–24 hours (another speed difference from home). Your afternoon is typically free. Use it to:
- Rest at your hotel
- Explore the neighborhood — grab food, find a pharmacy, orient yourself
- Video call family back home (remember the time difference: when it's 3 PM in Shanghai, it's 3 AM on the East Coast)
- Review any questions for tomorrow's follow-up
If you're still comparing treatment options or wondering whether you've chosen the right facility, our guide on choosing the right hospital breaks down what to look for in Chinese medical institutions.
Hour 48–72: Meeting Your Surgeon and Confirming the Treatment Plan
The Results Review
By the morning of Day 3, your test results are in. You'll meet with your treating physician (and often the surgeon, if surgery is planned) for a comprehensive review. This meeting is critical — it's where you get:
- A confirmed diagnosis (or adjustment to your existing diagnosis based on new findings)
- A detailed treatment plan including procedure type, timeline, expected hospital stay, and recovery period
- A cost breakdown — itemized, transparent, and typically far lower than you've been quoted at home
- Honest answers about success rates, risks, and alternatives
This is also the moment where some patients realize the Chinese medical team recommends a different approach than what was suggested in the US. It might be less invasive, or use a technique that's more widely practiced in China. Your coordinator helps you understand the reasoning and gives you space to decide.
Making Your Decision
Nobody will pressure you. If you want a second opinion within the same hospital system, that can usually be arranged within 24–48 hours. If you want to take a day to think, call your family doctor back home, or do your own research — that's perfectly fine.
If you'd like a clearer picture of costs before making a commitment, you can estimate your costs here using our treatment calculator. It gives you a ballpark based on procedure type, hospital tier, and expected length of stay.
If You Proceed: What Happens Next
Once you agree to the treatment plan:
- Admission paperwork: You'll sign consent forms (translated into English) and pay the hospital deposit.
- Pre-operative preparation: If surgery is scheduled, you'll receive specific instructions — fasting times, medication adjustments, what to bring to the hospital.
- Scheduling: Surgery is typically scheduled within 2–5 days of confirmation. Some less complex procedures can happen as early as the next day.
What Surprises Most Americans
After coordinating hundreds of medical trips, here are the things patients consistently say caught them off guard — in a good way:
- Speed. From landing to confirmed treatment plan in 72 hours. In the US, this process often takes 3–6 weeks of scheduling, referrals, and insurance pre-authorizations.
- Directness. Chinese doctors tend to be straightforward. They tell you what they think, what they recommend, and what the numbers say. Less hedging, more clarity.
- Cost transparency. You get an itemized cost sheet before any procedure. No surprise bills arriving months later.
- Hospital scale. Major Chinese hospitals see enormous patient volumes. Your surgeon may perform your specific procedure 200+ times per year, compared to 20–30 times at many US facilities.
- Technology. Top Chinese hospitals have equipment that matches or exceeds what you'd find at US academic medical centers. The "developing country" assumption gets shattered quickly.
The Part Nobody Talks About
The Emotional Reality
Let's be honest about something: being a medical patient in a foreign country is emotionally complex, no matter how smooth the logistics are.
You might feel:
- Vulnerable. You're far from home, dealing with a health issue, in an unfamiliar environment. That's a lot at once.
- Relieved. Many patients report a surprising sense of relief once they're actually in the system — the waiting and uncertainty of "should I do this?" is replaced by forward momentum.
- Lonely at moments. Even with a coordinator and a comfortable hotel, there will be quiet evenings when you miss your people. Video calls help. So does having a book, a show to binge, or a journal.
- Empowered. You made a decision that most people wouldn't have the courage to make. That means something.
Practical Realities Worth Knowing
- Food: Hospital cafeterias are inexpensive but heavily Chinese-cuisine focused. Your coordinator can help you find Western food options nearby, or you can order delivery through apps (they'll help you set this up).
- Communication: WeChat is essential in China. Download it before you arrive. It's how your coordinator, hospital staff, and everyone else will message you.
- Cash vs. digital: Most places accept mobile payment (Alipay or WeChat Pay, which you can link to a foreign card). Carry some cash for small vendors, but you won't need much.
- Quiet hours: Chinese hospitals enforce rest hours (usually 12:00–2:30 PM and after 9:00 PM). The wards get genuinely quiet. Americans find this surprisingly civilized.
Why Coordination Matters More Than You Think
Could you navigate all of this alone? Technically, yes — some people do. But here's what patients consistently say after going through the process: the value of having someone like OrientHealthLink coordinate your trip isn't about any single task. It's about not having to hold the entire experience in your head while simultaneously managing a health condition.
Your coordinator handles hospital registration, test scheduling, language barriers, payment logistics, transportation, and the hundred small things that would otherwise eat your energy. You focus on your health. That division of labor matters more than you'd think when you're jet-lagged, fasting for blood work, and trying to remember the questions you wanted to ask your surgeon.
If you're weighing whether to go it alone versus using a coordination service, we've broken down the real differences in our coordination vs DIY comparison.
Your Next Step
If you're still in the research phase — comparing hospitals, estimating costs, figuring out whether your condition is a good fit for treatment in China — you don't need to commit to anything yet. You can get a free assessment that includes a preliminary treatment recommendation and cost range based on your medical records. No obligation, no pressure, just information to help you decide.
The 72 hours after landing are the bridge between deciding and doing. And once you're on the other side of those three days, most patients say the same thing: "I wish I'd done this sooner."
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