Health & Fitness

CA Hospital Ranking Fall 2021: The Best And The Worst

Safety grades by the nonprofit health care watchdog group Leapfrog show how hospitals in California responded to the coronavirus pandemic.

 Several Golden State hospitals received top safety marks while others didn't quite measure up in The Leapfrog Group's annual fall safety grades released Wednesday.
Several Golden State hospitals received top safety marks while others didn't quite measure up in The Leapfrog Group's annual fall safety grades released Wednesday. (Getty Images)

CALIFORNIA ? How safe are hospitals in California? While you?re likely in good hands, new safety grades released by a national watchdog group focused on improving health care safety show your local facility might have room for improvement.

The Leapfrog Group on Wednesday released the fall 2021 Hospital Safety Grade, which assigns a letter grade to the nation?s general hospitals based on how well they prevent medical errors, accidents, injuries, and infections that kill or harm patients.

"As the pandemic continues, we all have heightened awareness of the importance of hospitals in our communities and in our lives," said Leah Binder, president and CEO of The Leapfrog Group, in a news release. "It is critical that all hospitals put patient safety first."

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This year?s list reviewed just over 2,900 hospitals, the largest number of hospitals ever graded.

"Now we have more information on more hospitals than ever before, so people can protect themselves and their families,? Binder said.

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In California:

  • 94 hospitals received an A grade.
  • 60 hospitals received a B grade.
  • 105 hospitals received a C grade.
  • 22 hospitals received a D grade.
  • 2 hospitals received an F grade.

Among the hospitals in California that received an "A" grade was Kaiser Permanente Orange County-Irvine Medical Center, El Camino Hospital and Petaluma Valley Hospital.

See the full list of California hospitals here.

To determine each hospital?s grade, a panel of medical experts selected 30 evidence-based measures of patient safety such as postoperative sepsis, blood leakage and kidney injury. They then determined the weight of each measure based on evidence, opportunity for improvement and patient impact.

Data on each measure was collected through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Information from the Leapfrog Hospital Survey, available to all hospitals to complete, also affects grades.

Currently, Leapfrog does not assign grades to military or Veterans Administration hospitals, critical access hospitals, specialty hospitals, children?s hospitals or outpatient surgery centers.

The Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade methodology has been peer-reviewed and published in the Journal of Patient Safety.

The full methodology for the 2021 Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade is available online.

Findings from the fall 2021 Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade include:

  • Thirty-two percent of hospitals received an "A? grade; 26 percent received a "B," 35 percent received a "C," 7 percent received a "D," and less than 1 percent received an "F.?
  • The five states with the highest percentages of "A" hospitals are Virginia, North Carolina, Idaho, Massachusetts and Colorado.
  • There were no "A" hospitals in Delaware, Washington, D.C. and North Dakota.

It's worth noting the hospitals were graded during a time of extraordinary pressure on the health care system due to the coronavirus pandemic.

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