The general objective of the project is to increase the accessibility of medical services for the population of Simleu Silvaniei City and in the rural area served, especially for the population at risk of poverty, by equipping with efficient medical equipment the only public outpatient in the city. The press releases launched by the Ministry of Health in recent years emphasise that about 70 % of hospitalised patients can be treated in outpatients by providing, in this regime, consultations and treatments for a wide range of medical conditions, thus reducing the costs generated by their treatment (by avoiding hospitalisation of patients) and ensuring increased patient comfort. Outpatient medical services can take a large proportion of medical casuistics (lower, acute or chronic illnesses) leading to the improvement of patients’ health and thus increasing the quality of life and increasing social inclusion because the treatment in this regime allows regular everyday activities, not involving isolation of patients through hospitalisation. In this regard, however, there must be a well-developed infrastructure that can respond promptly to the needs of patients and encourage the demand for these medical services to the detriment of hospitals. With more than 30 years old, the outpatients – from the “Prof. Dr. Ioan Puscas” City Hospital – offers medical services from a wide range of specialisations addressing the basic needs of the population in terms of medical services needed to ensure health, namely: internal medicine, ENT, ophthalmology, general surgery, obstetrics-gynecology, pediatrics, orthopedics and traumatology, neurology, dermatovenerology, recovery: physical medicine and balneology, psychiatry, pneumology, gastroenterology and rheumatology. Although it is the only public outpatient in Simleu Silvaniei, the outpatients within the “Prof. Dr. Ioan Puscas” City Hospital, most of them have not benefited from major investments in medical equipment and equipment since 2011 (when a project was implemented to modernise and rehabilitate it, within the ROP 2007-2014, Axis 3.1 Health Services) and some equipment and equipment used have been owned since 1986, since the outpatient opening. Also, the institution does not have a number of medical equipment necessary to carry out analyses and investigations and to allow rapid and accurate diagnosis and in order to establish the appropriate treatments. Some of the medical equipment is used in common, by several specialisations or is borrowed, if necessary, from the spit, which makes the medical act difficult and inefficient. At the same time, because the equipment currently owned to carry out the sterilisation operation is very old, ambulatory