It looks like Consumer Reports is the newest group to add their two cent’s worth about hospital safety, and hospital safety ratings. The magazine has compiled their own listing and ratings for over 1,100 American hospitals. Surprisingly, just 158 received sixty or greater points (out of a 100 possible.) This comes on the heels of the most recent release of the LeapFrog results. (Leapfrog is controversial within American healthcare due to the unequal weight it gives to many of its criterion. For example, it is heavily weighed in favor of very large institutions versus small facilities with similar outcomes.)
Consumer Reports has a history providing consumers with independent evaluations and critiques of market products from cars to toasters since it’s inception in the 1930’s. It’s advent into healthcare is welcome, as the USA embraces new challenges with ObamaCare, mandated EMRs, and pay-for-performance.
While there is no perfect system, it remains critical to measure outcomes and performances on both an individual (physician) and facility wide scale. That’s why I say; the more scales, scoring systems and measures used to evaluate these issues – the better chance we have to accurately capture this information.
But – with all of the increased scrutiny of American hospitals, can more further investigation into the practices and safety at facilities promoting medical tourism overseas be far behind?
Now it looks like James Goldberg, a bioengineer that we talked about before, is going to be doing just that. Mr. Goldberg, who is also an author of the topic of medical tourism safety recently announced that his firm will begin offering consulting services to consumers interested in knowing more about medical tourism – and making educated decisions to find the most qualified doctors and hospitals when traveling for care. He may be one of the first to address this in the medical tourism industry, but you can bet that he won’t be the last..
If so, the winners in the international edition will be the providers and facilities that embrace transparency and accountability from the very beginning.