New Hyde Park Hospital Gets 'C' Grade; Northwell Responds
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New Hyde Park NY
07 November, 2019
4:32 PM
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NEW HYDE PARK, NY — Just three Long Island hospitals received "A" grades in hospital safety, according to new fall 2019 ratings released Thursday by the Leapfrog Group. Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park was not among them, instead receiving a "C" grade, as it has for the last several years. The Leapfrog Group's rating system, released twice a year, focuses entirely on errors, accidents, injuries and infections. On Long Island, in addition to the hospital that received "A" grades, four received "Bs,"13 received "Cs" and two received "D" grades. None received the lowest F grade. Long Island Jewish Medical Center performed below average in the following areas, according to Leapfrog: Infections MRSA infectionProblems with Surgery Death from serious treatable complicationsPractices to Prevent Errors Doctors order medications through a computerSafe medication administrationCommunication about medicinesCommunication about dischargeSafety Problems Patient falls and injuriesDoctors, Nurses and Hospital Staff Communication with doctorsCommunication with nursesResponsiveness of hospital staffA spokesman for Northwell Health told Patch all of its hospitals are transparent about sharing quality and performance information with the public. "Whenever information contained in the various 'hospital report cards' identifies a potential quality issue, the public can be assured that we are already aware of it and working aggressively to resolve it," Northwell said in a statement. "We do this routinely as part of our ongoing internal operations and analysis (no matter how high our grades may be), so that we can provide the best patient experience possible." The health system added that it takes such report card grades seriously, whether it agrees with the methodology or not. The grades are used to improve patient care. "Because the data is frequently from prior years, we have already identified those areas that may need improvement and implemented programs to improve the performance where it is needed," Northwell said. "As always, we continue to work hard, pay attention to detail and be vigilant about patient safety and satisfaction."
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