Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in Boston has again topped U.S.
News and World Report's list of "America's Best Hospitals"
for psychiatry.
It is the 10th year running that MGH has found itself in the coveted
slot.
The psychiatry program at New York-Presbyterian University Hospital of
Columbia and Cornell ranked second on the list, and Johns Hopkins Hospital in
Baltimore is the third-ranked psychiatry program in the United States.
The rankings for psychiatry are based solely on each program's reputation
in the field, while rankings for other specialties include mortality ratios
and quality of patient services as well.
Each year, the news magazine publishes a list of the top-ranked hospitals
for 17 areas of medicine, including oncology, rehabilitation, and
gynecology.
Researchers from RTI International, a consulting firm based in Research
Triangle Park, N.C., randomly selected a sample of 3,400 board-certified
physicians from the American Medical Association's master file of 811,000 U.S.
physicians. Slightly less than half of the sample responded to the 2005
survey.
All physicians surveyed were asked to list the five hospitals they
considered most reputable in their specialty for "difficult cases"
without taking cost of services or location into consideration.
For psychiatry and specialties such as ophthalmology, pediatrics,
rehabilitation, and rheumatology, this was the only factor on which the
rankings were based.
About half of the 152 psychiatrists surveyed cited MGH as having the best
reputation for treating difficult cases successfully.
"We have a great deal of expertise and depth in many areas of modern
psychiatry, and the department is an extraordinarily collegial place,"
Jerrold Rosenbaum, M.D., MGH psychiatrist in chief, told Psychiatric
News.
He cited the department's research endeavors as one of the reasons for its
stellar reputation in the field.
"We have a tradition of conducting clinical research that has
relevance to patient care," he said, pointing out that the researchers"
are the clinicians themselves who are dedicated to difficult-to-treat
and treatment-resistant patients."
The psychiatry program at MGH has an annual research budget approaching $50
million, according to Rosenbaum.
He also called MGH faculty "extraordinary teachers" who
understand the daily challenges of treating patients.
It is the "world-class clinical services for mental disorders"
that helped put New York-Presbyterian University Hospital in second place on
the magazine's list of psychiatry programs, according to Jeffrey Lieberman,
M.D.
Lieberman is psychiatrist in chief at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and
Columbia University Medical Center, chair of Columbia University's Department
of Psychiatry, and director of the New York State Psychiatric Institute.
The program draws on the expertise of psychiatry faculty from Columbia
University's College of Physicians and Surgeons and Weill Medical College of
Cornell University, which "infuses the clinical programs with
cutting-edge knowledge of the nature and treatment of mental disorders,"
he added.
U.S. News and World Report's"Best Hospitals
2005" list is posted at<www.usnews.com/usnews/health/hosptl/tophosp.htm.>▪