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    30 NJ hospitals earn A grades for patient safety in spring Leapfrog grades

    By Jessica Perry,

    16 days ago

    The last time The Leapfrog Group released its hospital safety grades, nearly 20 from the Garden State recorded losses. But in the most recent assessment, New Jersey facilities made gains.

    More than 80% of the state's hospitals earned A or B scores in the Spring 2024 Hospital Safety Grades revealed May 1. Altogether, 67 acute care Garden State facilities participated. New Jersey ranked No. 3 in the nation for the number of As a 10 spot jump from the fall.

    Nearly 3,000 facilities nationwide received grades. The designations ranging from A to F reflect participants' prowess around preventable medical errors, accidents, injuries and infections.

    At 81%, the number of New Jersey's honor roll facilities, so to speak, was up from 76% in the fall.

    This spring:



    • 30 hospitals earned As (45%), eightmore than last time


    • 15 hospitals improved from the fall


    • 24 hospitals recorded Bs


    • 12 Hospitals earned Cs


    • Nine hospitals recorded declines


    • One hospital scored a D (CarePoint Health Christ Hospital; down from fall's C grade)




     

    A pair of hospitals improved by two grades, moving from Cs to As: Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Hamilton and Saint Michael's Medical Center. No New Jersey facility earned an F.

    Participation with Leapfrog is voluntary. In recent years, all or nearly all of the state's hospitals have taken part. A ccording to the New Jersey Hospital Association , there are 72 acute care facilities in the state.

    Two hospitals were not scored. There was not enough data to evaluate Bergen New Bridge Medical Center, the New Jersey Quality Institute said . Additionally,
    following a recent merger , Inspira Medical Center Mannington received a new Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Certification Number, so it was not eligible this round, the Quality Institute said.

    [box type="shadow" align="alignright" width="45%" ]

    Making the grade



    Six hospitals improved to earn A grades in the Spring 2024 Hospital Safety Grades:



    • Hackensack Meridian Bayshore Medical Center


    • Hackensack Meridian Palisades Medical Center


    • Hackensack Meridian Raritan Bay Medical Center


    • Holy Name Medical Center


    • Monmouth Medical Center


    • Saint Clare's Hospital of Dover


    • Saint Peter's University Hospital


    • St. Joseph's Wayne Medical Center




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    The
    New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute represents 100-plus members from across health care focused on improving the safety, quality and affordability of health care.

    Since the onset of COVID-19, the patient experience has trended downward. This spring signals a change in that regard. The Quality Institute highlighted the latest evaluation as the first to show progress across all patient experience metrics, with improvements over the fall.

    "The number of A and B hospitals highlights that we are, overall, doing well as a state," said Adelisa Perez-Hudgins, director of quality, Quality Institute. "The percentage speaks to the dedication of hospitals and health care teams that focus on patient safety and quality improvement."

    "Consumers can and do use the Hospital Safety Grade to select the safest hospitals in their area," said Linda Schwimmer, president and CEO, Quality Institute. "And we know that transparent reporting on patient safety drives improvements in quality, saving lives and reducing preventable injuries."


    Getting better



    This latest Leapfrog release includes a new breakdown of safety performance by metropolitan area. Based on the highest percentage of A hospitals, the No. 1 core-based statistical area was Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton PA-NJ.

    [box type="shadow" align="alignright" width="35%" ]

    5



    RWJBarnabas Health facilities earned A grades



    “At RWJBarnabas Health, safety is the number one priority for everyone that comes through our doors. The hard-working staff at each facility, who day in and day out provide the best patient-centered care, also demonstrate clinical expertise and compassion.” Dr. Andy Anderson , executive vice president, chief medical and quality officer


    [/box]

    Nationwide, Leapfrog said 92% of hospitals have improved performance on at least one of three preventable infections (Central line-associated bloodstream infections, catheter-associated urinary tract infections; methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus or MRSA). Incidences of these hit a peak in fall 2022, the Quality Institute said.

    However, there is still work to be done. Leapfrog said patient safety "remains at a crisis-level hazard in health care."

    Citing peer-reviewed research published in The BMJ , Leapfrog said an estimated 250,000 people die each year from preventable errors and hospital infections. That makes patient safety problems the third leading cause of death in the United States.


    “Patient experience is very difficult to influence without delivering better care, so these findings are encouraging,” commented Leah Binder, president and CEO of The Leapfrog Group.




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