Hospitals in Repedea
1 hospitals listed in the city of Repedea, with address, phone and opening hours where available. Data sourced from OpenStreetMap, refreshed weekly.
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See also pharmacies in Repedea or other medical categories: hospitals · clinics · vet clinics · pet shops.
Choosing the right hospital in Romania
Romania's hospital network mixes public units (run by the Ministry of Health, county or municipal authorities) and private hospitals or clinics. Public hospitals cover the bulk of emergency care and are funded through the National Health Insurance House (CNAS); private units may charge directly or work with private insurance and supplementary subscriptions. For most acute episodes, where you go matters less than how fast you get evaluated — the emergency department is obliged to see you regardless of insurance status.
Emergency room vs. urgent care
Go to a hospital emergency department (UPU/CPU) or call 112 right away if you have chest pain, sudden weakness on one side, breathing difficulty, severe abdominal pain, heavy bleeding, signs of stroke, head trauma with loss of consciousness, suspected poisoning, or a high fever in a small child you cannot bring down. For symptoms that are unpleasant but stable — a moderate fever, a sprain, a non-bleeding wound, persistent cough, a urinary infection — a daytime visit to a general practitioner, an urgent care clinic or an ambulatory specialist is usually faster and just as appropriate.
What to bring
- An ID document (carte de identitate or passport).
- The CNAS health card, if you have one — it speeds up registration.
- A list of medicines you take regularly, with doses, plus known allergies.
- Recent medical paperwork: discharge letters, lab results, imaging if available.
- If you go for a scheduled admission: pyjamas, slippers, toiletries and a phone charger.
Practical tips
Phone the hospital before you leave home for any non-emergency visit — opening times of the outpatient department, the bed availability or the on-call schedule may have changed since the last data refresh. For specialised treatment (oncology, cardiology, neurosurgery, burns) Romania concentrates expertise in a handful of regional or university hospitals; ask your GP for a referral letter. If you are a foreign visitor with an EHIC card, present it at admission to be billed under reciprocal EU rules. Romania's universal emergency number is 112 — operators speak Romanian and English.
Information for orientation only — does not replace professional medical advice. In a medical emergency in Romania, call 112.