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Medical Treatment in China for Danish Patients

Healthcare system

Regioner (public) + Private (Falck, Aleris DK, etc.)

Typical wait (elective)

4–10 months (specialty-dependent)

Private hip replacement

DKK 100,000–180,000 (hip replacement, private)

China advantage

50–70% lower costs

Overview

Denmark's regionalt sygehusvæsen provides solid primary and emergency care, but elective waiting times and limited private sector capacity drive some patients to seek alternatives. Danish patients have legal freedom to seek treatment in third countries at their own cost, and China's combination of quality and price is increasingly attractive for orthopaedics, dentistry, and fertility treatment.

Why Denmark Patients Look Abroad

  • Sygehusvalg (hospital choice) doesn't extend to non-EU treatment
  • Elective orthopaedic waiting times 6–12 months in public hospitals
  • Dental care not covered by sygesikring for adults — high out-of-pocket costs
  • IVF: public funding limited to 3 cycles, age and BMI restrictions
  • Private sector capacity limited compared to population demand

Cost Comparison: Denmark vs China

ProcedureDenmark (Private)China (Grade 3A)
Hip ReplacementDKK 100,000–180,000 (private)€5,500–€9,000
Knee ReplacementDKK 90,000–150,000 (private)€5,000–€8,500
IVF (per cycle)DKK 25,000–45,000 (private)€2,500–€4,500
Dental ImplantDKK 15,000–28,000€400–€800

Costs are indicative ranges. Exact quotes provided after medical record review.

China's Advantage for Denmark Patients

Immediate availability, costs 50–65% below Danish private rates

Visa & Travel

Danish nationals require a visa for China. Direct connections Copenhagen–Beijing/Shanghai via hub airports. Your coordinator will assist with visa requirements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can patients from Denmark legally seek treatment in China?

Yes. Residents of Denmark have every right to seek private medical care in any country, including China. ChinaHealthGuide.org is an information and referral service — we provide information and connect you with coordinators, not medical advice.

Will my insurance cover treatment in China?

Denmark's public health insurance does not reimburse planned treatment in China. Some private health insurance policies cover international treatment — check your policy wording. We recommend comprehensive travel and medical insurance that covers treatment abroad.

What visa do I need as a Denmark resident?

Danish nationals require a visa for China. Direct connections Copenhagen–Beijing/Shanghai via hub airports. Your coordinator will assist with visa requirements.

How do I get my medical records translated?

Your medical coordinator handles translation of key documents (diagnosis reports, imaging, blood tests) as part of the intake process. You should request digital copies of imaging (CD or download link) from your home hospital before travelling.