How
Inter-Hospital Transfer Coordination Works in Bali for Foreigners
Quick answer: Inter-hospital transfer coordination
in Bali means safely moving a patient from one hospital to another —
usually from a smaller clinic to a larger, better-equipped or more
international-facing hospital — with the medical handover, transport
(ambulance with appropriate staff and equipment), records, and
receiving-hospital admission all arranged in sequence. For foreigners,
the transfer is normally initiated by the treating doctor on
medical grounds, but the practical logistics — confirming a
receiving bed, arranging the right ambulance, moving records, notifying
insurance, and keeping the family informed — often need active
coordination, especially across a language barrier. Done well, a
transfer is seamless; done poorly, it’s where details get lost.
I’m Dr. Maya Anggraini, founder of Bali Patient
Concierge. Transfers are a common but stressful moment for
families, because a lot has to happen correctly and quickly. Here’s how
the process works and where coordination matters most.
Why a transfer happens
An inter-hospital transfer in Bali is a clinical
decision made because the patient needs something the current
facility can’t provide. Common reasons:
- The current clinic lacks the specialty, ICU, or
equipment needed. - The patient needs a higher level of care (e.g.,
surgery, intensive care). - The family requests a move to a more international-facing,
accredited hospital. - Insurance works more smoothly with a hospital
experienced in direct billing.
The decision to transfer, and whether the patient is stable enough,
is always the treating doctor’s call.
Who arranges what
A transfer involves several moving parts, and they must line up:
| Task | Usually handled by |
|---|---|
| Deciding the transfer is medically appropriate | Treating doctor |
| Confirming a bed at the receiving hospital | Both hospitals’ desks / coordinator |
| Arranging the right ambulance + medical escort | Sending hospital / ambulance service |
| Moving medical records and imaging | Sending hospital / coordinator |
| Notifying the insurer / updating the GoP | Patient, family, or liaison |
| Keeping the family informed | Coordinator / concierge |
The clinical parts are the hospitals’ responsibility. The
glue — chasing the receiving bed, making sure records
travel with the patient, updating insurance, translating for the family
— is where a concierge earns its keep. This sits within our hospital admission assistance
work.
Step 1: Confirm
the receiving hospital and bed
Before moving, the receiving hospital must accept the patient
and confirm a bed in the right unit (ward, ICU, specialty). A
transfer should never leave without this confirmed, or the patient risks
arriving with nowhere to go. For choosing an appropriate receiving
hospital, our neutral Bali Hospitals
Guide explains which facilities handle international patients and
higher-acuity care.
Step 2: Arrange
the right ambulance and escort
Not every transfer needs the same transport. Depending on the
patient’s condition, a transfer may need:
- A basic ambulance for a stable patient, or
- An advanced/ICU ambulance with monitoring, oxygen,
and a nurse or doctor escort for anyone unstable.
Matching the ambulance to the clinical need is essential. For how
ambulances work generally, see how to call an ambulance
in Bali as a foreigner and private ambulance
cost in Bali for tourists.
Step 3: Move records with
the patient
The receiving team needs the full picture on arrival: diagnosis,
treatment so far, medications given, test and imaging results, and the
reason for transfer. These should travel with the
patient — physically and/or sent ahead electronically — so care
continues without gaps. An interpreter helps ensure the handover is
understood by the family too; see our medical interpreter service.
Step 4:
Update insurance before or during transfer
A transfer can affect billing. If the patient has insurance:
- Notify the insurer’s assistance line about the
transfer and the new hospital. - Check whether the Guarantee of Payment needs to be
reissued for the receiving hospital. - Confirm the receiving hospital can do direct
billing with the insurer.
We cover this in how to
arrange direct billing between your insurer and a Bali hospital.
Keeping the family
informed and safe
For families, the anxiety is not knowing what’s happening. Good
coordination means:
- One point of contact who explains each step in
plain English. - Consent handled properly — the patient (or an
authorised decision-maker) understands and agrees to the transfer. - Realistic timing — transfers can take hours to
organise safely; rushing an unstable patient is dangerous.
If the patient can’t consent, a medical power of attorney may be
relevant — see power
of attorney for medical decisions in Bali.
Reputable source: Patient-safety authorities
identify care transitions and handovers — including inter-facility
transfers — as high-risk points where communication failures cause harm,
and recommend structured handover of clinical information and clear
responsibility for the patient during transfer. (Source: World
Health Organization patient-safety guidance on communication during care
transitions/handover, who.int; consistent with WHO Patient Safety
solutions.)
When the transfer
is international (evacuation)
Sometimes the safest transfer isn’t to another Bali hospital but
home or to a regional hub by medical evacuation. That’s
a specialist, insurance-driven process — flag it early with your
insurer’s assistance company, since evacuation coverage and logistics
are complex and time-sensitive.
Let us coordinate the
transfer end to end
A hospital-to-hospital move has too many moving parts to leave to
chance while you’re worried about a loved one. Tell us the situation and
we’ll help confirm the receiving bed, make sure the right ambulance and
records go together, update insurance, and keep you informed in plain
English at every step.
- Request transfer &
admission coordination on the contact page → - WhatsApp us 24/7: chat now
- See our full patient support service on the Bali Patient
Concierge homepage.
Medical disclaimer: Bali Patient Concierge provides
logistics, interpretation and coordination support. We are not a
hospital and do not make clinical decisions — whether and when to
transfer a patient, and whether they are stable to travel, is decided by
the treating physicians. Always consult a licensed physician.
Written by Dr. Maya Anggraini, MD (Universitas Udayana Faculty of
Medicine; member, Indonesian Medical Association/IDI). Medically
reviewed by Nurse Putu Ariani, RN, on 10 March 2027.