Step 1: short intake

The first step is a short summary of diagnosis, current treatment status, patient goal, country or region, preferred language, and contact method. The public form should not collect full medical files.

Step 2: records readiness

A coordinator confirms which records are needed, such as pathology, imaging reports, treatment history, medication list, molecular testing, or operative notes. Records readiness is not a medical suitability decision.

Step 3: physician or hospital review

When records and consent are ready, we help match the case to a best-fit leading specialist doctor or hospital team for second-opinion review. Any medical opinion, pathway judgment, or travel-related medical suitability question must be handled by licensed clinicians or hospitals.

Step 4: hospital pathway

If the patient gives records-sharing consent and the case fits the service pathway, coordination may continue with relevant private or public hospital pathways. Access, timing, cost, and outcome cannot be guaranteed.

Step 5: visit planning

Travel planning should cover visa timing, appointment windows, language support, companion needs, accommodation, local transport, payment process, and post-visit follow-up.