Behind the Best Children's Hospitals Rankings
Just as the objective of the Best Hospitals rankings is to help adults with uniquely challenging medical needs, kids with rare or life-threatening illnesses such as cystic fibrosis or cancer or severe heart defects are the focus of America's Best Children's Hospitals. Case volume, research fellowships, reputation for managing complex illnesses, and the other factors reflected in the children's hospitals rankings usually aren't the kinds of things that loom large in the course of routine pediatric care. To a young patient who is at serious risk, however, they matter. The bar for a child in need of the best care should be set high.
The facilities most likely to provide exceptional pediatric care are freestanding children's hospitals and large multispecialty pediatric services. With the help of the National Association of Children's Hospitals and Related Institutions (NACHRI), we identified a universe of 160 such centers nationwide and ranked the top 30 in 10 specialties: cancer, digestive disorders, heart and heart surgery, neonatal care, neurology and neurosurgery, and respiratory disorders, plus four—diabetes and endocrine disorders, kidney disorders, orthopedics, and urology—that are new this year. We have also introduced an Honor Roll this year, to recognize the few hospitals that earned a spot in all 10 specialty rankings.
[See America's Best Children's Hospitals and search for one near you.]
The data used to compare institutions were gathered in a 65-page survey completed by the hospitals, covering care-related information from surgical death rates and compliance with known weapons against infection to involvement in research activities and the availability of key subspecialists such as pediatric anesthesiologists. It had to be collected directly from the hospitals because there are no large independent sources of data to draw upon akin to the enormous Medicare files we use to assess adult care.
To help us refine the standards for judging hospital performance, we sought advice from nearly 70 medical directors, department chairs, infection specialists, and other experts, grouped into specialty panels. Their recommendations, developed over four months, were reviewed by RTI International and incorporated into the survey. (RTI, a large research and consulting firm, also oversees the Best Hospitals project.) Of the 160 hospitals contacted, 98 responded. The remaining 62 effectively removed themselves from contention.
Hospitals were ranked on scores made up of three major elements: reputation, medical outcomes, and care-related indicators such as patient volume, nurse staffing, and availability of specialized programs. Because of space constraints, only the most important measures are displayed. A full listing and descriptions of all of the measures, as well as an explanation of how they were chosen and the methodology constructed, are available in an extensive methodology report. Here are the basics of the three fundamental elements behind the approach:
Reputation. Pediatric specialists selected at random from a comprehensive national database in a way that weighs all parts of the country equally were surveyed and asked to name up to five hospitals they believe can provide the best care for patients with serious or difficult problems in their specialty. The responses from 1,500 specialists surveyed in 2009, plus responses from 900 others surveyed last year in the original six specialties, counted as 50 percent of the final score in nine specialties and 60 percent of the final score in cancer (see below). Nearly 60 percent of the physicians surveyed responded, a rate considered extraordinarily high for such a survey.
Outcome. Surgical death rate, transplant survival, and bloodstream infections were among the outcomes measures that made up 10 percent of the final score in all specialties other than cancer. Surgery and procedures leading to bloodstream infections are relatively uncommon in cancer patients, and other credible indicators were absent.
Care-related indicators. Measures such as participation in infection-control programs, surgical volume, and nurse staffing counted as 40 percent of the final score.
Reader Comments
children's hospital of LA
Children's hospital of LA is not what they say they are.My daughter who was diagnosed with CTD @ birth was a patient there up until the doctor who was treating her there moved to a different hospital. Childrens hospital did not assign my daughter a new doctor and said the doctor who replaces your previous dr. will contact you, no one ever did.The disease my daughter has can be fatal if she fails to take her medication.The pharmacy had been contacting the hospital for refills for one whole year when they called me to say the doctor would not authorise the prescription.After calling the hospital they said they could not approve my daughters prescription because she was not a pattient there.I responded how can she not be a patient if you've been reffiling her prescription for a year I told them my daugher could die if she did not have this prescription,how can I get her to be seen by a Dr. in genetics asap they said I had to be reffered by my primary physician and it could take up to a year and sorry but they could not reffil my prescription.I after asking the primary physician to reffer my dauther all over again she said they were ridiculous she had already been reffered a year ago and they had her whole file there but reffered her again anyway, needless to say its been 3 years and I still havent her of children's hospital to schedule an appointment.Luckily the receptionist @ the desk said that what they were doing was wrong and the only reason they refused to treat my daughter was because she was insured by medi-cal she gave me the number to where my previous doctor was working now so she is now seen by her previous doctor in los angeles county hospital where they feel she belongs because she is a medi-cal patient, Childrens hospital does not make the well being of the children their main priority and is outright wrong.
Adolescent Medicine?
Why is the specialty of Adolescent Medicine left out of the surveys? Adolescents are an important demographic. I don't see this specialty listed on any of the polls.
What's really important here people
Everyone here disputing why their childrens hospital didn't
make to top ten list should really be concerned about only one thing...The competency of the facility that their children or grandchildren are sent to for complicated surgeries and treatment. Our newborn grandson was born with heart defects that required a five hour surgery to "replumb" his little heart. Our son and his wife live in New Hampshire where our grandson was born...they discovered at the last minute before releasing them to go home with him that his breathing wasn't normal. Then they found that his lungs weren't receiving oxygenated blood. They moved him immediately to Boston Childrens hospital. He was admitted to the cardiac ICU.
I could go into all the intricate descriptions of his diagnosis but that is not what I want to talk about here. The doctors, nurses, surgeons and cardiac and respiratory specialists demonstrated an impressive degree of competence, compassion and
patience with our family. By the time we returned home to California we felt as though those professionals had become a member of our family. We can see why this facility, attached to
Harvard Medical School, is ranked at the top of children's hospitals. Is it better than those not listed that some of you are upset about.....my answer is this....if you have found your childrens hospital is the best facility because of your experience involving your child or grandchild, rankings really don't matter do they. The important thing is that your loved one is receiving the best care they can receive in the country.
Be happy and thankful for that.....Once more....you should thank God for that!
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