Health & Fitness
2 NC Cities Among Nation’s Leaders In Getting Health Care Right
A new report from Healthgrades ranked the top 100 cities for healthcare. Here's are the NC cities they ranked as among the best.

A new report has ranked two North Carolina cities among the best 100 cities in the country for health care. Healthgrades, which helps consumers find and schedule appointments with health care providers, on Tuesday released its 2019 National Health Index, which aims to evaluate which cities are getting health care right.
The cities were ranked based on four categories: access to care, population health, hospital quality and local specialists. Charlotte, according to the authors, ranked 56th overall, 62nd in the country for access and 44th for population health. The study said the Queen City ranked 37th for hospital quality and 87th for local specialists.
Raleigh, according to the authors, ranked 78th overall, 55th in the country for access and 19th for population health. The study said the state’s capital also ranked 72nd for hospital quality and 70th for local specialists.
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The city doing health care the best is Rochester, Minnesota. The authors called Rochester, which has a population of just over 218,000, a “small town with a big presence for quality health care.” The city earned the the highest ranking in both hospital quality and local specialists. Nearly half of its hospitals have 5-star ratings for multiple procedures and conditions, while residents maintain a normal weight and exercise regularly.
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Here are the top 10 cities, according to Healthgrades:
- Rochester, Minnesota
- Burlington, Vermont
- Charleston, South Carolina
- Cincinnati, Ohio
- Baltimore, Maryland
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Gainesville, Florida
- Hartford, Connecticut
- San Jose, California
- Cleveland, Ohio
The index found that San Francisco was the healthiest of all cities on the list, and Worcester, Massachusetts, ranked highest in access to health care.
The index looked at more than a dozen variables and grouped them into four health care categories: 1) whether the residents of each city were healthy overall, 2) if consumers had access to health care, 3) if local specialists achieved high marks in patient satisfaction and physician count per capita and 4) if patients had access to high-quality hospitals. The last category is based on Healthgrades’ own hospital quality analysis.
Archelle Georgiou, MD, senior advisor to Healthgrades, said in a release that it’s not easy to judge whether a city is getting health care right. For this reason, numerous industry data sets were used to help paint a more complete picture of health care at the local level.
“The National Health Index is designed to help consumers understand the health of their community, to empower them to navigate their care journey with confidence and to help them access the right care in their market,” said Georgiou.
The index is based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, provider specialty information and patient experience survey scores, the U.S. Census Bureau and Healthgrades 2019 award year hospital quality ratings.
Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.
Photo credit: Shutterstock
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