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Planned care programs for patients who want a clearer, lower-friction path
Some cross-border care journeys are more standardized and time-bounded than complex specialist cases. This section brings together planned programs that usually benefit from clearer logistics, advance preparation, and calmer coordination.
A separate path for more standardized care journeys
These pages are not meant to turn healthcare into a package catalogue. Their purpose is to help patients and families understand which kinds of planned care can often be prepared more clearly before travel.
Where complex diagnosis or urgent medical decision-making is involved, a different planning path may be more appropriate. This section is for situations where the main need is a lower-friction, well-prepared visit rather than open-ended specialist uncertainty.
Cataract surgery
A structured ophthalmology pathway for suitable patients exploring cataract surgery with pre-op review and practical follow-up planning.
Explore programDentistry
Dental visits that may involve cleaning, implants, orthodontics, aesthetic restoration, or periodontal planning across one or more appointments.
Explore programMedical aesthetics
Non-urgent medical aesthetics with suitability review, pre-op preparation, and recovery-aware coordination.
Explore programWhat these programs usually have in common
- Pre-arrival planning around timing, travel practicality, and whether records or test results are needed in advance.
- Appointment coordination that keeps the process organized instead of asking patients to manage unfamiliar hospital steps alone.
- Translation and communication support where language may otherwise create avoidable friction.
- Guidance on what to prepare, what to expect on the day, and how to think about recovery or follow-up after the visit.
How to use this section
- Start with the main goal of the trip: screening, vision improvement, dental planning, or a non-urgent aesthetic procedure.
- Think about timing. Some programs can fit into a shorter visit, while others work better when repeat appointments are realistic.
- Consider how much support a companion may need to provide before, during, and after appointments.
- Review recovery expectations early. A smoother trip usually comes from planning around the recovery window, not only the procedure date.
Not sure which program fits your situation?
If you already know which type of planned care you are exploring, tell us the program, your timeline, and whether a companion will be traveling with you. That is usually enough to start a more useful conversation.