April 21st, 2010
Reports the Philadelphia Inquirer:
Each year U.S. News & World Report ranks the nation’s 5,000 or so hospitals in 12 specialty areas.
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia is routinely ranked first among pediatric hospitals. Each year, the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania makes the “honor roll,” putting it in the top tier of adult institutions. This year, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital ranks 17th in orthopedic care and 11th in rehab care.
But what do those rankings - at least the top 50 lists in those 12 specialty areas - really tell patients or, for that matter, the doctors who refer patients to hospitals for surgery and other specialty care?
Not much, according to a study in the current issue Annals of Internal Medicine.
“By combining several subjective and objective measures, U.S. News & World Report’s rankings appear to be a rigorous, complex and multidimensional index of hospital quality,” wrote Ashwini R. Sehgal, a doctor at Case Western Reserve University and MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland, which ranked 35th in diabetes care last year. “However, the relative standings of the top 50 hospitals largely reflect the subjective reputation of those hospitals.”
Sehgal said that since the rankings are based on hospitals’ reputations, the magazine does not account for the actual quality of care delivered. Thus, he wrote that a hospital that does not have national prominence or recognition despite being of the highest quality is unlikely to break into the top ranks. And he notes that people who rely on such rankings must recognize that it is based on reputation, not some objective measure of quality.
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