Executive Medical Examination: Booking and International Pathway

Executive Medical Examination: Booking and International Pathway

For patients considering international travel for an executive medical examination, the booking process matters as much as the exam itself. Pre-arrival coordination, document preparation, and travel logistics can save weeks of frustration. This light guide walks through the international patient pathway in detail.

Pre-Arrival: What to Send

Before booking, prepare:

  • Medical history (chronic conditions, allergies, medications)
  • Prior imaging (DICOM files from last 2-3 years)
  • Recent labs (within 12 months)
  • Family history (1st-degree relatives' major diseases)
  • Surgical history
  • Current medications with doses
  • Specific concerns you want addressed
  • Vaccination history
  • Insurance documentation if applicable

A pre-arrival summary helps the medical team focus the exam on what matters most for your case.

Pre-Arrival Video Consultation

Top international patient programs offer a 30-60 minute video consultation before travel:

  • Review your medical history
  • Customize the exam components
  • Set expectations for the visit
  • Answer your questions about the program
  • Address language/cultural considerations

Some programs charge a separate fee (¥500-1,500 in China); others include it in the package.

Booking Timeline

A reasonable timeline for international executive exam:

  • Week -4: Initial inquiry, send medical records
  • Week -3: Video consultation; customize exam
  • Week -2: Confirm dates, book flights, hotel
  • Week -1: Final pre-arrival communication; receive prep instructions
  • Days 1-3: At the destination
  • Day 1 evening or Day 2: Exam begins
  • Day 2-3: Full exam over 1-2 days
  • Day 4: Results review with physicians
  • Day 5-7: Return home with report

For multi-day comprehensive exams, plan 5-7 days total trip.

Document Preparation

Documents to bring:

  • Passport with valid visa (China has multiple visa options; M visa for business or L for tourism are usually appropriate)
  • Health insurance cards
  • Translated medical history (if not already in English)
  • DICOM USB drive with prior imaging
  • Pre-arrival booking confirmation
  • Hotel reservation

Some hospitals accept printed PDF of medical records; others prefer DICOM-format imaging for upload to their PACS system.

Visa and Travel Logistics

Visa considerations for China:

  • L visa (tourism): covers medical travel; standard 30-90 day options
  • M visa (business): for business + medical visits
  • F visa: for cultural/medical exchange
  • No special "medical visa" required in China for most patients

Check current visa requirements for your nationality at China Embassy website. Booking through a Chinese hospital sometimes includes visa support letters.

Hotel Selection

Top hotels near major Chinese medical centers:

  • Beijing PUMC area: Beijing Hotel, Crowne Plaza, Westin Wangfujing (₂kilometers walk to PUMC)
  • Shanghai Ruijin area: Jin Jiang Hotel, Garden Hotel (close to Ruijin)
  • Shanghai Fudan SCC area: Pudong Shangri-La, Renaissance Pudong
  • Shenzhen HKU-Shenzhen area: Sheraton Shenzhen, Marco Polo Shenzhen
  • Guangzhou Sun Yat-sen Cancer Center area: Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons Guangzhou

Many hospitals partner with adjacent hotels for medical traveler rates.

For coordinating a complete international medical trip, our team can help.

During the Exam

A typical 2-day Chinese executive medical examination:

Day 1:
- 7 AM: arrival, registration
- 7:30 AM: fasting labs
- 8:30 AM: BMI, body composition, ECG, vital signs
- 9 AM: imaging (chest CT, abdominal ultrasound, thyroid ultrasound)
- 11 AM: cardiac (echo, possibly CCTA or CAC)
- 12 PM: lunch break
- 2 PM: endoscopy (gastroscopy + colonoscopy under sedation)
- 5 PM: end of day

Day 2:
- Morning: specialty consultations (cardiology, nutrition, GI, oncology if findings)
- Afternoon: comprehensive results review with internal medicine

Day 3-4: written report delivered, follow-up discussion if needed

Results Format

Report typically includes:

  • All test results with reference ranges
  • Imaging reports
  • Specialist interpretations
  • Risk stratification
  • Recommendations for follow-up
  • Lifestyle suggestions
  • Translation summary in English

PDF reports are usually available within 48 hours after exam completion.

After Returning Home

Continuing care after the trip:

  • Share full report with your home physician
  • Schedule any indicated follow-up (e.g., 6-month repeat for a borderline finding)
  • Implement lifestyle and treatment recommendations
  • Plan next biennial or annual exam

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I do the exam in my home country or abroad?
Depends on cost, time, and what's covered. For self-pay patients comparing options, top international centers often offer better value.

How long should I plan to stay?
Minimum 3 days, ideal 5-7 days. Allows time for exam, results review, and follow-up.

Will my home physician work with the international report?
Yes, at top centers. Reports are translated to English, follow international standards.

Are Chinese executive exams safe quality-wise?
At top tier-1 international hospitals, yes. Modern equipment, experienced physicians, English service.

Need Help Booking?

SinoCareLink can pre-book your executive medical examination at a top Chinese hospital, coordinate pre-arrival video consult, translate reports into English, and arrange airport pickup and hotel. Contact us for a free consultation.

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