open
🕗 opening times
Monday | open 24 hours | |||||
Tuesday | open 24 hours | |||||
Wednesday | open 24 hours | |||||
Thursday | open 24 hours | |||||
Friday | open 24 hours | |||||
Saturday | open 24 hours | |||||
Sunday | open 24 hours |
1301, Avenida Varela, C1406, ELA, Comuna 7, AR Argentina
contacts phone: +54 11 4630-7300
website: www.buenosaires.gob.ar
larger map & directionsLatitude: -34.6447471, Longitude: -58.4543431
Jordana Rosales
::With the few resources that the doctors have, it is still the hospital where they treat you the fastest. I don't know what some are complaining about! With the looting that there is to public health! These people continue to perform miracles, especially the doctors on call.
Patricia Silvia Granieri
::The rulers should seriously take care of public hospitals, so that everything is not left in the hands of medical personnel. I have no complaints about the attention received at the Guard, on the contrary, I just wait for it. That it would have been the same in a private clinic, on the other hand. Governors: put more people, put money, be present. Prioritize public health.
Karen Aranda
::Terrible guard service. Worse in shift change, the lack of respect of the doctors towards the patients is more noticeable because they arrive and go to breakfast, as if the people who are waiting are not interested. Do not leave older people alone there because they are discarded. It is unfortunate that some doctors or nurses treat people like objects. The administrative information also fails. It shows that the hospital is no man's land.
Diego D. Latella
::They really improved it a lot. It changed for the better, now it is more appropriate to serve the citizen. We know that doctors do what they can, that they are more patients than they should attend to, but many times you wait more than an hour. The population that goes to this hospital is too much in relation to the health personnel. And it does not go through the pandemic, before it was the same. More health personnel and better pay. Goal hug.
Mimi P
::In 1978, my mom came here in her 30's after being sick for a month. She was coughing up blood and too tired to stand up in line. A doctor with white swooped back hair (maybe aged in his 60's) pulled her out of line and took her to the 3rd floor for tests. If that doctor didn't help her, she could have died of Tuberculosis. She would have left behind my older sister and brother, and I never would have been born. My mom had to get injections and antibiotics for 6 months, every day, to get better. But because she was so busy caring for her family and working, she regrets never thanking that doctor. I have no idea who this man was, or if anyone working at the hospital today knows his family. I live nowhere near Argentina. But he saved her life and mine. She is still well and told me this story today. :) Happy Holidays. Thank you.