For Changchun they list the Norman Bethune Medical University. I became friends with a student there, and he told me that the school is actually linked with Johns Hopkins in the US and something like 95% of the graduates emigrate to the US and practice medicine there. Don't know if that's true or not, but he did speak good English
Sorry, but that's complete nonsense. There isn't even a school called Norman Bethune Medical University anymore. It is the Medical Institute of Jilin University. Same school though. I taught there last year. It
was a very highly ranked medical school for China. By international standards it is like comparing professional American baseball to a Chinese school baseball team.
Yeah, I know. You can't actually compare them.
The majority of students do speak pretty good English. A few do go on to study at various overseas locations. I am not aware of any large scale association with Johns Hopkins. There are no foreign doctors teaching at the medical school. A very nice married pair of retired Canadian doctors come every year and teach for 3 months. And various specialists come to give lectures or participate in 1-2 day seminars. Their speeches are usually translated to Chinese for the attendees.
The quality of the graduates has declined over the past few years since the amalgamation of Norman Bethune into the bankrupt Jilin University system. They actually have at least 3 teaching hospitals, and I have taught quite a few of the department heads and doctors traveling to overseas training. A surprising lot of them do speak useful English. But the Chinese version of Western medicine is still about 50 years behind developed countries, except in a very few big city hospitals (not Changchun).
If you have to get really sick in Changchun, a teaching hospital is your best bet for finding English speaking doctors, but having spent time as a patient and a teacher there, I'd opt for staying healthy.