Who We Are, Why We Focus on GI, and How to Reach Us

Shanghai MedTrip is a Shanghai-based medical travel facilitator focused on selected outpatient GI cases. We are not a hospital, not a physician practice, and not an insurance company. Our role is coordination only — not medical advice.

Shanghai-based coordination service Selected outpatient GI cases only Coordination only, no medical advice Fit screening before paid coordination

A narrow coordination service, not a broad medical tourism marketplace

Shanghai MedTrip is built around one narrow use case: helping selected international patients assess whether a Shanghai-based outpatient GI pathway may be worth pursuing. We do not try to be everything for every diagnosis.

What we are

A Shanghai-based medical travel facilitator focused on selected GI-related outpatient coordination cases.

What we are not

Not a hospital, not a doctor, not a licensed insurer, and not a substitute for urgent local medical care.

What we do

We help screen fit, organize communication, support logistics, and guide the practical coordination process when a case appears appropriate.

Plain-language version: We help people decide whether this route makes sense, and if it does, we help coordinate the route. We do not diagnose, prescribe, or promise clinical outcomes.

Selected outpatient GI cases only

Our service is intentionally narrow. That is part of the trust model. We focus on selected outpatient GI cases, not general surgery, oncology, cardiology, emergency care, or inpatient hospital navigation across every specialty.

Typical fit

  • Patients seeking a structured outpatient GI workup path.
  • Cases involving chronic bloating, suspected SIBO, ongoing GI uncertainty, or selected second-opinion style evaluation.
  • People who already have some records and want an honest screening before making travel decisions.

Usually not a fit

  • Emergency symptoms or unstable medical situations.
  • Cases likely to require immediate admission, urgent surgery, or emergency diagnostics.
  • People looking for a promise of treatment result before travel.

Why we focus on GI instead of trying to cover every specialty

Broad “medical tourism” language often sounds impressive but creates weak trust. We focus on GI because a narrower pathway allows clearer screening, better expectation-setting, and more honest conversations about what travel can and cannot solve.

Narrower scope means clearer fit decisions

The more generic a service becomes, the harder it is to tell people truthfully whether their case should travel. A focused GI pathway makes honest screening more realistic.

Records matter more than marketing language

GI cases often depend on prior testing, symptom duration, medication history, and documentation. That makes screening quality more important than big tourism promises.

Expectation-setting is easier

A narrow pathway helps explain in advance what may improve, what may not improve, and what cross-border coordination can realistically do.

Why we start with fit screening instead of selling everyone a package

The easiest way to destroy trust in a high-ticket medical coordination service is to push every visitor toward payment. We do the opposite: fit review first, paid coordination later.

Why this matters

Not every patient should fly. Not every symptom cluster should enter a cross-border pathway. Not every case benefits from adding travel complexity.

Starting with fit screening allows us to tell some people “this is probably not the right route” before money changes hands.

What screening protects against

  • Wrong-fit cases entering a paid package too early.
  • Patients mistaking coordination for medical treatment.
  • Travel decisions being made before records and practical constraints are reviewed.
  • High-pressure sales framing in a context where careful judgment matters more.
Important boundary: Free case review is a screening step, not a diagnosis, not a doctor opinion, and not a promise that travel is appropriate.

How to reach us

If you are deciding whether to submit a case, asking about scope, or clarifying what records to prepare, use the channels below. This page should feel more credible than a single footer email because it is meant to be a real contact page, not a placeholder.

Direct contact

Email
Best for case review questions, records preparation questions, and policy-related requests.
WhatsApp
medtrip-shanghai
Search for this business name in WhatsApp to start a chat. If you cannot find the profile, email us and we will help you connect.
Working hours
Monday–Friday, 10:00–18:00
China Standard Time (UTC+8). We are not a 24/7 call center; replies outside these hours may be next business day.
Response timezone
China Standard Time (UTC+8)
Helpful for U.S. users so they understand when a “same-day reply” is realistic.

Business identity

Service description
Shanghai-based medical travel facilitator
Primary service scope
Selected outpatient GI coordination cases
Operating city
Shanghai, China
Legal entity / operating body
招采宝科技
Invoice name
招采宝科技
The name shown on invoices or payment records; update if your billing name differs.

What contacting us does and does not mean

This section matters because high-trust contact pages should reduce confusion, not create it.

What contacting us means

  • You can ask whether your situation appears to fit our coordination scope.
  • You can ask what records to prepare before submitting a formal case review.
  • You can ask practical questions about process, timing, and coordination boundaries.

What contacting us does not mean

  • It does not create a doctor-patient relationship.
  • It does not mean you have been accepted for hospital care.
  • It does not mean a hospital date is guaranteed.
  • It does not replace urgent local medical care.

Start with fit, not with pressure

If your case may fit this narrow GI coordination pathway, use the free case review first. That is the cleanest way to move from curiosity to a real yes-or-no fit decision.