“America’s Best Hospitals” for 2008

U.S. News & World Report comes to the aid of patients all over the US revealing its “America’s Best Hospitals,” a magazine that hit newsstands this weekend.

The magazine was the result of a survey conducted by Massachusetts Health Quality Partners, which included 51,000 adult patients and 20,000 parents of pediatric patients. Also, the study included data from the American Hospital Association and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. All these data were collected and analyzed on behalf of US News by RTI International, a Research Triangle Park nonprofit.

The survey included questions not only about doctors but also about medical staff and their ability to handle patients and their questions about their cases and necessary treatments. The hospitals were judged not in routine procedures but in difficult cases across a specialty. Reputation and death rate were also important factors in classifying the hospitals.

Moreover, to be considered for most lists, hospitals had to either be affiliated with a medical school, a member of the Council of Teaching Hospitals or employ at least six of 13 key technologies such as robotic surgery. These qualifications are not met by two-thirds of US hospitals.

Overall, pediatricians were the ones ruling the classification, with 95 percent parents happy about communication compared to the 90 percent of adult patients. Communication was an important key in patients’ care, with more than four out of five patients saying their own doctors gave them clear explanations. Also, a little over half of patients said other doctors or medical stuff always did that too.

From a total of 5,453 medical centers involved in the study, 170 hospitals were ranked in one or more specialties and just 19 of those reached “honor roll” status. The distinction signifies hospitals that scored at or near the top in at least six of the list’s 16 specialties.

The magazine did not take into consideration veterans’ or military hospitals because data were not available for them.

Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore took the No. 1 overall spot among hospitals for the 18th year in a row.

The other 18 best hospitals included Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.; Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles; Cleveland Clinic; Massachusetts General Hospitals, Boston; New York-Presbyterian University Hospitals of Columbia and Cornell; University of California, San Francisco medical Center; Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston and Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.; Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia and University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle; Barnes-Jewish Hospital/Washington University, St. Louis; University of Michigan Hospitals and Health Centers, Ann Arbor; UPMC-University of Pittsburgh Medical Center; Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville; Stanford Hospital and Clinics, Stanford, Calif.; University of Chicago Medical Center; Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles and Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Conn.

All these hospitals ranked high in the following specialty areas: heart and heart surgery, geriatric care, gynecology, cancer care, gastrointestinal disorders and ear, nose and throat.

The other ten specialties considered when classifying the hospitals were as follows: endocrinology, kidney disease, neurology & neurosurgery, ophthalmology, orthopedics, psychiatry, rehabilitation, respiratory disorders, rheumatology and urology.

America’s Best Hospitals” follows “Best Children’s Hospitals” for 2008, which was released last month by US News and World Report.

Anyone who is interested in more than the list of hospitals above can find information at health.usnews.com/sections/health/best-hospitals.