Hospital ratings

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Old 08-17-2024, 06:04 AM
Black Beauty Black Beauty is offline
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The VA hospital in Gainsville...
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Old 08-17-2024, 06:50 AM
Dkintzer Dkintzer is offline
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I will start by letting you know I am a nurse…
Just to clarify for you, the hospital in TV is now a UF Health Hospital…the same as “Gainesville” which is UF Health. University of Florida Health hospitals all used to be called “Shands” hospitals. I moved here from Jacksonville & we all know that there are 4 major hospital names there (plus Mayo) BUT, for trauma…Shands (UF Health) is the absolute best. So when we think of the hospital here in TV, think University of Florida Health (same as Gainesville.) That being said, ANY hospital is only as good as the employees that work there.
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Old 08-17-2024, 06:51 AM
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Very recently my wife was experiencing symptoms of a heart attack. I took her to the ER on Rt 44 across from Brownwood. We were pleasantly surprised by the care received. She was not having a heart issue but they were very thorough with her care
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Old 08-17-2024, 06:54 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gatorbill1 View Post
In an emergency the closest one is the best
In NY, the closest one is REQUIRED. My mom always went to one hospital - 1.1 miles away. The ambulance took her to the other hospital a mile away - which she never went to. They didn't know who to call (the other hospital did) and she was alone in a coma for three days.
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Old 08-17-2024, 06:56 AM
Rzepecki Rzepecki is offline
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Originally Posted by villagetinker View Post
I believe there is a problem with the Medicare method of rating hospitals. As I understand it there is an assumption that all hospitals have a similar patient base. Unfortunately for hospitals in this area there is a greater portion of older patients, which leads to a higher-than-average death rate at the hospitals and therefore a lower rating. I do not know of any other rating system, bear this in mind when you start getting replies. The other problem is many of the hospital ERs are being used for NON emergency purposes, which causes major backups, especially during snowbird season. There are now several local stand alone ERs as well as a few Urgent care facilities.
NOTE: it appears if you call an ambulance, you will NOT have a choice of which facility you want to go to, we had this happen personally.
I wonder if whether or not you are taken to the hospital of your choice depends on the health problem and the ER status. Last year my husband was taken by ambulance to the hospital of our choice.
  #21  
Old 08-17-2024, 06:56 AM
jimdecastro jimdecastro is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by villagetinker View Post
I believe there is a problem with the Medicare method of rating hospitals. As I understand it there is an assumption that all hospitals have a similar patient base. Unfortunately for hospitals in this area there is a greater portion of older patients, which leads to a higher-than-average death rate at the hospitals and therefore a lower rating. I do not know of any other rating system, bear this in mind when you start getting replies. The other problem is many of the hospital ERs are being used for NON emergency purposes, which causes major backups, especially during snowbird season. There are now several local stand alone ERs as well as a few Urgent care facilities.
NOTE: it appears if you call an ambulance, you will NOT have a choice of which facility you want to go to, we had this happen personally.
I sort of disagree. The highest rated hospital on Long Island has the HIGHEST death rate - because they take all the worst heart conditions.
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  #22  
Old 08-17-2024, 07:08 AM
MandoMan MandoMan is offline
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Originally Posted by Velvet View Post
In an emergency, which hospitals near The Villages have the best ratings?
AdventHealth/Waterman (not AdventHealth/Ocala) has the highest rating between Orlando and Tampa and Gainesville. That’s what I use. They are fanatical about avoiding MRSA, and that is one reason why their rating is so high. I had a hip replacement there (Dr. Radnothy), and I was very pleased with the care. It’s about 35 minutes’ drive for me. Also, if you are in their system, if there is a problem that demands the most advance treatment, such as a very rare heart condition, they can send you to AdventHealth/Orlando, which is the top-rated hospital in Florida.
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Old 08-17-2024, 07:08 AM
Shipping up to Boston Shipping up to Boston is offline
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Originally Posted by jimdecastro View Post
I sort of disagree. The highest rated hospital on Long Island has the HIGHEST death rate - because they take all the worst heart conditions.
GE post #7....addresses this perfectly
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Old 08-17-2024, 07:22 AM
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Having been in the Villages Hospital (now UofF) I can say things have changed for the better. The last three ER visits were less than 45 minutes. Once admitted, it is the difference between night and day since the university took over. The staff is very attentive and caring. Big, big difference from days gone by.
  #25  
Old 08-17-2024, 07:37 AM
bdw08 bdw08 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gatorbill1 View Post
In an emergency the closest one is the best
Ambulance took husband to The Villages Hospital after he fell and broke knee. They took X-rays. He sat in a chair only to be told six hours later that they don’t do orthopedics. Had to hire transport to get him home only to call ambulance next morning to take him to another hospital.
  #26  
Old 08-17-2024, 07:40 AM
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Originally Posted by bdw08 View Post
Ambulance took husband to The Villages Hospital after he fell and broke knee. They took X-rays. He sat in a chair only to be told six hours later that they don’t do orthopedics. Had to hire transport to get him home only to call ambulance next morning to take him to another hospital.
Hmm how long ago was this?
  #27  
Old 08-17-2024, 07:42 AM
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Originally Posted by jimdecastro View Post
I sort of disagree. The highest rated hospital on Long Island has the HIGHEST death rate - because they take all the worst heart conditions.
I'm afraid I have to disagree to disagree.

When talking about NY, the whole Health Dept. reporting is, well, wonky. As chairman of Quality Assurance, then Chief of Staff and member of the Board of directors of a Central NY hospital, I dealt with these issues for over 15 years.

The first thing to realize is that NYC area was treated entirely differently than the rest of NY State. The NYSDOH targeted many upstate hospitals because politics/philosophy made them impotent in the NYC area. Many NYC hospitals did not even bother to report the required data to the state, and the state could do nothing about it, since NYC was where the votes were. Long Island wasn't as bad, but they still got pretty much a "free ride" as far as the state went.

Now, when it is state the highest rated hospital had the highest mortality rate, that is not unusual. May I assume you are referring to St' Francis in Port Washington? (possibly Winthrop?). I did a rotation in 1982 with Randy Griepp---one of the top 5 cardiothoracic surgeons in the country at the time. He had a very high mortality rate since he would take on cases that others wouldn't touch, plus by operating at Kings County his cases were far more advanced. I believe he ran about 4% mortality while Spencer, Shumway and Cooley were running 1%. When the media started publishing these numbers he looked pretty bad, because they didn't explain it.

Bottom line, unless you are on the inside, these numbers should be taken with a grain of salt. Since I am not "on the inside" in Florida, I am just as much in the dark here as the rest of you.
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Old 08-17-2024, 08:14 AM
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great information! thanks for sharing!
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Old 08-17-2024, 08:17 AM
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First, IMO, every hospital has mostly good people with some bad apples or bad services. I worked in hospital-based cancer centers for nearly 40 years, and I learned to ask coworkers where they would go for XYZ services, so I would ask your primary care doctor and specialists where they would recommend. Individuals, like me, may base all of our opinions on limited data, even a single good/bad encounter, so a large grain of salt with posters. I had an afib issue and went to UF off 44. The ER wait was not trivial as there were others ahead of me. Once I was seen, I was very comfortable with the physician, staff, facilities and care given as well as their recommendations. Another qualitative measure is using Press Ganey scores (in my experience many hospitals use it), which are based off patient ratings, and while it's only how people "felt" about their care, it's enough of a sample to give you an idea.
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Old 08-17-2024, 09:02 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by villagetinker View Post
I believe there is a problem with the Medicare method of rating hospitals. As I understand it there is an assumption that all hospitals have a similar patient base. Unfortunately for hospitals in this area there is a greater portion of older patients, which leads to a higher-than-average death rate at the hospitals and therefore a lower rating. I do not know of any other rating system, bear this in mind when you start getting replies. The other problem is many of the hospital ERs are being used for NON emergency purposes, which causes major backups, especially during snowbird season. There are now several local stand alone ERs as well as a few Urgent care facilities.
NOTE: it appears if you call an ambulance, you will NOT have a choice of which facility you want to go to, we had this happen personally.
You can choose which hospital you want to go to. I specified the er on 466a and at first they said if I needed to be hospitalized it would be another transport and I would have to pay. Was in and out with x rays mri and a cat scan in two hours, much better than the. Villages hospital.
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