No hospital in New Jersey received a failing grade in the latest round of safety scoring released by The Leapfrog Group. But more than a dozen facilities fell short of an A or B grade.
In the spring 2021 report released Thursday, 26 of New Jersey s 68 acute-care hospitals (38%) received an A for their ability to protect patients from avoidable infections, injuries and errors. Another 38% received a B from Leapfrog, a nonprofit watchdog organization representing health care consumers and purchasers.
Ten hospitals improved upon their grade from fall 2020, and four hospitals moved down a grade.
Based on the percentage of A grade hospitals, New Jersey moved from 17th to 14th in the nation. Saint Barnabas Medical Center, located in Livingston, is one of just 27 hospitals in the country to have achieved straight A grades since Leapfrog began grading in 2012.
Here are N.J.’s safest hospitals. See how yours ranked in new national report.
Updated May 03, 2021;
Posted Apr 29, 2021
Saint Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston maintained its straight-A streak since the Leapfrog Safety report card began in 2012. It is one of only 27 in the country to earn an “A” in each of the 19 report cards.
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New Jersey hospitals ranked 14th safest in the country based on how well they prevented infections, accidents and errors and communicated with their patients, the latest Leapfrog Hospital Safety report card released on Thursday found.
The scores for 68 acute care hospitals 26 A’s, 26 B’s, 15 C’s and one D helped New Jersey improve its standing from last fall, when it was 17th best, according to the report. Ten hospitals improved a grade and four hospitals slipped a grade. No hospital flunked. East Orange General Hospital scored the lowest with a D, the report said.
How safe is your hospital? New grades released by Leapfrog Group wobm.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wobm.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
N.J.’s largest nurses union filed 24 worker safety complaints during pandemic
Updated 11:00 AM;
Today 11:00 AM
Hackensack Meridian Health Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen faces more than $65,000 in fines for employee safety violations issued by the federal government.EJA
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The state’s largest nurse and health care worker union filed 24 complaints over employee safety violations during the pandemic, and will seek a larger role through contract negotiations in determining how hospitals, nursing homes and other health care employers respond to emergencies, its president said.
HPAE, Health Professionals and Allied Employees learned a lot over the last year, namely, “We were not prepared at all for any pandemic or crisis situation and we need to have worker input,” HPAE President Debbie White said.
1:32 am UTC Mar. 11, 2021
Family grieves after RN dies of COVID-19
Matt Birchenough, son of Barbara Birchenough talks about the preparation that could have saved his mother s life and the grieving that takes place after a loved one is lost to COVID-19. August 2020
Kevin R. Wexler, NorthJersey.com
Barbara Birchenough was working the night shift when COVID-19 made its stealthy entrance at Clara Maass Medical Center a year ago. She was a 46-year veteran of the Belleville institution, a graduate of its nursing school who had raised four kids while commuting from Midland Park. Retirement and a normal schedule with time for her grandchildren beckoned on the horizon.