5 reasons to take hospital ratings with a big grain of salt

5 reasons to take hospital ratings with a big grain of salt

It’s hospital ratings season in America, that time of year when marketing executives kick it into high gear to trumpet — and spin — the way their hospitals are graded by outside organizations.

This year, their workload has been especially heavy. In addition to annual rankings released Tuesday by U.S. News & World Report, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) just released its star-rating system for hospitals nationwide. While the ratings offer some valuable information to consumers, here’s why you shouldn’t put too much stock in the results.

No matter how objective the metrics, ratings are inherently subjective

The federal government and private organizations use a vast array of hospital data to break down their performance and boil it into easy-to-understand ratings for consumers. U.S. News & World report formulates its rankings by relying on a mix of physician surveys and data reported to trade groups and the federal government. CMS ratings are based solely on data hospitals are required to report to the agency.

The information itself may be objective, but which data points are used — and how they are weighted — can lead to contradictory conclusions. Consider the following:

Of US News & World Report’s’ top five hospitals,  only one  — Mayo Clinic — received a top, five-star rating from CMS. The rest — Cleveland Clinic, Massachusetts General Hospital, UCLA Medical Center, and Johns Hopkins — were not even in CMS’ top 100. (Johns Hopkins did not receive a rating from CMS because of incomplete data).

J.B. Silvers, a professor of health care finance at Case Western Reserve University, said the information, while boiled down into simple lists and stars, can be difficult for consumers to unpack, especially when hospitals are working behind the scenes to figure out ways to better their scores every year. “Some hospitals are better at working the numbers than others,” he said. “My guess is the safety net hospitals aren’t as good at it as richer hospitals.”

 

251 hospitals earn 5 stars, 101 earn 1 star, in new CMS Hospital Compare rankings (full list)

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/251-hospitals-earn-5-stars-101-earn-1-star-new-cms-hospital-compare-rankings-full-list

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