Hospital ratings can tell you a lot. But here are the follow-up questions you could ask to learn more.
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Choosing where to get hospital care is one of the highest-stakes decisions a patient or family makes. And it’s often under time pressure. Hospital ratings exist to help with that decision. Forbes Top Hospitals By State 2026 ratings are built from 56 quality measures drawn from federal data—outcomes such as mortality, infections and readmissions, evidence-based best practices, value and patient experience drawn from surveys. All adjusted for the social drivers of health in each hospital’s community.
Here’s the magic of how measurement drives improvement. Publishing outcomes pushes hospitals to standardize best practices, catch problems earlier and compete on results rather than reputation. Inside a hospital, the same data tells chief quality officers and clinical teams where to focus. For example, a rise in a measured complication rate can trigger a review of a unit’s protocols long before it would otherwise be noticed.
Yet ratings deliver a compressed answer to a complicated question. Knowing what it’s actually measuring, and what a good score does and doesn’t guarantee, is what can turn number or a set of stars into a genuinely useful tool.
Here are five things hospital ratings can reliably tell you—and the follow-up questions to ask to help complete the picture.
1. How The Hospital Performs On Actual Patient Outcomes
This is where ratings are strongest. Mortality, infection rates and readmissions are drawn from claims data covering real patients. They capture whether people tend to survive, avoid complications and stay out of the hospital after they go home. A hospital that performs well here, consistently, over time, is doing something systematically right.
Here’s the follow-up question: Patients should be asking whether that performance holds at the level of the specific doctor or service line you’ll actually use. Hospital-wide averages blend everyone who practices there, and the variation between individual physicians can exceed the variation between hospitals—a classic New England Journal of Medicine study of nearly half a million Medicare patients found that a surgeon’s own case volume predicted operative mortality so strongly that patients of low-volume pancreatic surgeons faced more than three times the odds of dying.
A top-rated hospital can also excel in cardiology and underperform in obstetrics, as the FAQ for Forbes national hospital list acknowledges. Ask how many of a given procedure your surgeon and team perform each year, and check the pillar-level, clinical-area detail on the hospital’s profile instead of stopping at the headline score.
2. Whether The Hospital Follows Evidence-Based Best Practices
Process measures capture whether a hospital reliably does the things known to prevent harm—the right medication at the right time, infection-control protocols, discharge checklists. Process measures are a meaningful proxy for how disciplined and well-run an institution is.
Here’s the follow-up question: Patients should be asking about how their hospital handles complications. Adverse events happen even at excellent hospitals. What separates them is the ability to recognize deterioration early and act fast. A landmark analysis of Medicare surgical patients found that high- and low-mortality hospitals had strikingly similar complication rates. What differed was the death rate once a complication occurred, a dynamic researchers call “failure to rescue.”
A JAMA Open Network study published in 2026 confirms the pattern still holds, with hospital performance itself accounting for hundreds of avoidable deaths in the sample studied. It isn’t reported on most public ratings, so ask directly: is there a dedicated rapid-response team, and how quickly can a higher level of care be made available to youmaterialize if something goes wrong?
3. How Patients Rate Communication And Their Overall Experience
Patient experience surveys ask real patients whether nurses and doctors communicated clearly, whether pain was well controlled, whether the room was clean and quiet. This is important information for a patient to know.
Here’s the follow-up question: How the specific unit you’ll be on handles the moments a survey average can’t capture. An aggregate score can’t tell you whether a physician will sit down and explain a hard diagnosis with patience, or whether a family’s questions will be welcomed during a crisis. A unitIt also can’t be judged from a single anecdote in either direction—one rushed conversation with a resident on a difficult night doesn’t mean an entire hospital is uncaring, any more than one especially kind nurse means every unit runs that way.
If communication matters most to you, ask in advance how the unit handles family meetings, whether a palliative or supportive-care team is available, and exactly how you’ll reach the care team with questions later.
4. How Efficiently The Hospital Uses Healthcare Resources
The value pillar reflects Medicare spending per patient, adjusted for how sick patients are—essentially, whether a hospital delivers good outcomes without excessive resource use. It’s a real, if indirect, check on overuse.
Here’s the follow-up question: What you will actually be billed because that is a different question entirely. Facility fees, out-of-network surprises, aggressive collections and the generosity of financial assistance policies vary widely between hospitals and aren’t reflected in the value score. A KFF analysis estimates that Americans owe at least $220 billion in medical debt, with roughly one in twelve adults carrying some.
Before a planned procedure, ask your insurer whether the hospital and every physician involved are in-network, and ask the hospital directly about financial assistance policies. A 5-star hospital can still be a financial shock for a family and no rating will warn you of that.
5. How Timely And Accessible The Care Is Across Settings
To their credit, ratings do include some timeliness measures, such as the share of emergency department patients who leave before being seen. That’s a real, if narrow, window into whether a hospital is adequately staffed to handle demand.
Here’s the follow-up question: There are several areas timeliness questions the ratings don’t cover. No score captures how long you’ll wait for a specialist appointment or whether the emergency department is boarding admitted patients in hallways for lack of beds. For many families, those practical realities matter as much as anything measured.
This one has a simple fix: call ahead and ask directly, both about wait times for appointments after discharge and how the hospital handles boarding in the emergency department.
Here’s another caveat that applies across all five: most measures reflect care delivered one to three years ago, because ratings run on Medicare claims that take time to finalize, audit and aggregate across thousands of hospitals. A hospital that just recruited a top stroke team, or lost one, will look identical to its former self for a while. In this regard, it’s important to look at the multi-year trend rather than a single year’s snapshot, and don’t hesitate to ask directly about recent changes to the team or service line you’re relying on.
None of this is an argument against using the ratings. It’s an argument for treating a rating the way clinicians treat a single lab value: one input, interpreted in context, alongside the questions no database can answer.
For planned care—an elective surgery, a scheduled delivery, a complex procedure—use the ratings to build a short list, then ask follow-up questions about specific services and areas that may be important to you.
In a true emergency, skip all of it and go to the nearest emergency department. Minutes matter more than stars when you need care urgently, and federal law guarantees you will be evaluated and stabilized regardless of where you land.

