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HealthGrades, a national independent health-care ratings
company, released today its second annual “America’s 50 Best Hospitals Report.”
The organizations analyzed approximately 100 million
hospitalization records from nearly 5,000 hospitals, from the years 1999 to
2006 for this report. According to the report, the hospitals on the list “have demonstrated
superior clinical quality for the most consecutive years.”
“Only 1 percent of the nation's hospitals achieve this level of clinical
excellence. These hospitals are doing something very, very special that begins
with the leadership and is infused throughout the hospital,” Dr. Samantha
Collier, HealthGrades' chief medical officer and lead study author, said in a
statement.
The 50 hospitals are those ranked in the top 5 percent for clinical quality,
based on risk-adjusted mortality and in-hospital complication rates drawn from
Medicare data on 27 procedures and diagnoses from 1999 to 2006 by HealthGrades.
Harlan Krumholz, M.D., of Yale, an independent researcher
criticized the HealthGrades report for what he called its lack of transparency.
“Their measures are not peer reviewed. They have not passed their measures
through the National Quality Forum, the standard for all national organizations
including federal agencies like the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
They do not fully disclose their methods. They are not endorsed by any credible
independent body. I would like for them to be a legitimate force for good --
and they could by getting their measures approved by NQF, making their methods
transparent," Dr. Krumholz said quoted by MedPage Today.
The top 50 hospitals include nationally known facilities, such as Cedars
Sinai in Los Angeles, Mayo Clinic in Minnesota and the
Cleveland Clinic. Interestingly, Johns Hopkins was not among the best-rated
hospitals, not were any of the Harvard-affiliated hospitals.
The HealthGrades report is available
at www.healthgrades.com.
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