Italy Hospital Emergency 2026: Call 118 for the Ambulance, the Triage Colour Code Determines Your Wait (Red = Immediate, White = Up to 8 Hours), EHIC Covers the Full Cost at Public Hospitals, and the Major Italian ERs Are Among the Best in Europe
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
A medical emergency in Italy (the broken bone, the cardiac event, the severe allergic reaction, the head injury from the Amalfi Coast motorbike accident) requires the specific knowledge that the Italian emergency system (the Pronto Soccorso — the hospital emergency department identified by the specific red "PS" sign at the hospital entrance) operates on the specific Italian triage protocol (the triage — the specific Italian emergency classification system that assigns each arriving patient the specific color code (rosso/red, giallo/yellow, verde/green, bianco/white, or azzurro/blue in some hospitals) that determines both the clinical priority and the estimated waiting time). The Italian pronto soccorso is not an urgent care walk-in clinic: it is the full hospital emergency department (the reparto di emergenza-urgenza — the specific clinical department with the specific cardiology, neurology, surgery, orthopaedics, and toxicology sub-specialties available around the clock) that treats the full clinical spectrum from the minor laceration (the white code — not urgent) to the cardiac arrest (the red code — immediate resuscitation).
Italian Hospital Emergency: The System and What to Expect
The Triage Colour Codes
The specific Italian emergency triage colour system (the codici di triage — the classification used by the Italian pronto soccorso since the 1990 National Health Reform): Rosso (red) — the immediate life threat, the immediate treatment without waiting (the cardiac arrest, the severe trauma, the respiratory failure, the acute stroke): immediate treatment. Arancio or Giallo (orange/yellow) — the serious but not immediately life-threatening condition, treated within 15-30 minutes (the severe fracture, the significant head injury, the acute abdominal pain with vital sign instability). Verde (green) — the non-urgent but clinically significant condition, treated within 60-120 minutes (the minor laceration, the ankle sprain, the moderate pain, the urinary tract infection). Bianco (white) — the non-urgent condition that could be managed by the GP or the urgency care centre, treated within 4-8 hours (the mild sore throat, the medication refill request, the minor skin rash). The specific triage assignment: the triage nurse (the infermiere di triage — the specifically trained emergency nurse who performs the initial assessment within 15 minutes of arrival for all presenting patients) assigns the code based on the specific Italian triage protocol (the CTAS (Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale) adapted to the Italian emergency system).
The 118 Ambulance Service
The 118 service (the Sistema di Emergenza Medica 118 — the specific Italian medical emergency dispatch system operating nationally from the regional 118 dispatch centers): the call to 118 (the specific Italian medical emergency number — the equivalent of 999 in the UK and 911 in the US) connects directly to the regional emergency dispatch (the centrale operativa 118) which coordinates the specific ambulance dispatch (the ambulanza — the specific Italian ambulance equipped to the ALS (Advanced Life Support) or BLS (Basic Life Support) standard depending on the specific dispatch code). The 118 response time: the Italian Ministry of Health standard requires the specific 8-minute response for the red code (the life-threatening) and 15-minute for the yellow code in urban areas — the specific Italian metropolitan areas (Rome, Milan, Naples) typically achieve the 8-minute standard for red codes; the specific rural and mountain areas (the Apennine villages, the smaller Sardinian communities) have the specific 20-30 minute response times that the visitor in remote areas should factor into their emergency planning. The alternative emergency number: 112 (the European emergency number) routes to the specific 118 dispatch for medical emergencies in Italy.
EHIC Coverage at the Italian Emergency Room
The specific EHIC (the European Health Insurance Card) coverage at the Italian pronto soccorso: the EU visitor with the valid EHIC presents the card at the pronto soccorso admission and receives the specific treatment at the Italian citizen rate — for emergency treatments (the red and yellow codes) this means the treatment is free of charge (the specific Italian SSN policy of free emergency treatment for all patients regardless of citizenship or EHIC status). For the non-urgent conditions (the white and green codes), the EU EHIC holder pays the same ticket as the Italian citizen (the ticket di pronto soccorso: 0-25 euros depending on the code and the region). The non-EU visitor without travel insurance: pays the specific private patient rate (the tariffa non SSN — the specific non-NHS rate for foreign patients without EHIC coverage): approximately 80-200 euros for the emergency consultation and treatment, significantly below the equivalent US or Australian emergency room cost. The specific insurance process: the travel insurer reimburses the Italian emergency costs on presentation of the specific ricevuta di pronto soccorso (the emergency room receipt — always request this document before leaving the Italian hospital).
Q&A: Italy Hospital Emergency
What documents should I bring to the Italian pronto soccorso?
The specific documents needed at the Italian emergency room: the passport (the specific identification document — the Italian pronto soccorso requires a valid photo ID for patient registration; the passport is the most universally accepted single identification document for non-Italian patients); the EHIC or GHIC card (the specific health insurance card — present at registration, not at triage (the triage nurse treats the medical emergency regardless of insurance status)); the travel insurance documentation (the specific policy number and the insurer's emergency contact number — needed for the specific direct billing authorization if the Italian hospital offers it, or for the reimbursement claim after discharge); and the medication list (the specific list of current medications (the farmaci in uso) — the most important single clinical document for the emergency treatment (the Italian emergency physician who knows the full current medication list avoids the specific drug interactions that cause the most preventable adverse events in the Italian emergency room)).