Built for Georgia fertility clinics
Georgia — the country in the Caucasus/Europe (Tbilisi), not the US state — is a major fertility-tourism hub with 8–10 major clinics and no EMR mandate. Surrogacy has been legal since 1997, though commercial-surrogacy legislation is pending and should be monitored.
Surrogacy & Donor Management
Built-in surrogacy and donor registration, matching, and traceability — surrogacy has been legal in Georgia since 1997.
International Patient Portals
Multi-language patient portals for the cross-border fertility-tourism patient base, including CIS patients.
Multi-Language Clinical UI
Georgian, English, and Russian interface support for mixed clinical teams.
Encrypted & Controlled
AES-256 encryption, TLS 1.3, and role-based access controls across the platform.
What Georgia (Europe) clinics get with MedART
Purpose-built IVF workflows tuned to Georgia regulatory and operational needs.
Surrogacy Management
Surrogate registration, matching, contracts, and full traceability — legal in Georgia since 1997.
Donor Management
Donor registration, screening, matching, and lifetime traceability across the donor program.
Multi-Language UI
Georgian, English, and Russian clinical interfaces for mixed clinical teams.
International Patient Portal
Cross-border and CIS patients track cycles, documents, and travel logistics online.
Multi-Currency Billing
Bill international fertility-tourism patients in their own currency with a clean ledger.
IVF Cycle + Embryology
End-to-end cycle tracking with embryology lab chain of custody and cryo inventory.
Trusted by IVF leaders
What clinical and operations leaders say about running on MedART.
“These systems empower us to provide personalized treatment through comprehensive patient information.”
“MedART improved access to information, coordination, and clinical decision-making across our network.”
“This EMR has revolutionized reproductive healthcare operations, lowering costs and fostering transparency.”
Transparent, clinic-friendly commercial model
No hidden implementation fees. Built to scale with single clinics and multi-branch networks alike.
All-Inclusive Setup
Configuration, data migration, and staff training bundled into one onboarding engagement — no surprise implementation fees.
Per-User Subscription
Predictable per-user subscription that scales with your clinical team — pay for the seats you use.
Your Data, Your Infrastructure
Hosting and data-residency options aligned to your regulatory needs, with encryption and role-based access throughout.
Multi-Location Packages
Network pricing for multi-branch operators — one platform, centralised analytics, per-location access controls.
Get a tailored quote for your Georgia (Europe) clinic — based on team size, locations, and migration scope.
Georgia (Europe) clinic questions
Does MedART support surrogacy and donor programs?
Yes. MedART includes built-in surrogacy and donor management — registration, matching, and full traceability. Surrogacy has been legal in Georgia since 1997, and this is a core differentiator for Tbilisi clinics.
Can MedART serve international fertility-tourism patients?
Yes. Multi-language patient portals (Georgian, English, Russian) and multi-currency billing are built for Georgia’s large cross-border patient base, including CIS patients.
Which languages does the clinical interface support?
MedART supports Georgian, English, and Russian clinical interfaces so mixed clinical teams and international staff can work in their preferred language.
Is an EMR mandated for Georgian fertility clinics?
There is currently no EMR mandate in Georgia. MedART is adopted for operational and clinical-quality reasons — chain of custody, donor traceability, and international patient experience — rather than for compliance alone.
How long does implementation take?
Most clinics are fully live within 4–8 weeks: workflow discovery and configuration, data migration, multi-language staff training, then go-live with dedicated support.
Ready to see MedART for Georgia (Europe)?
Dedicated implementation team, data migration included, and a typical 4–8 week go-live.