World's Best Hospitals 2022 - Brazil

World's Best Hospitals 2022

The world's hospitals have been the front line in medicine's constantly evolving war against COVID-19 for two years now. According to the experts who helped guide the results of our annual ranking of the World's Best Hospitals, that has meant learning to adapt to new and existing challenges quickly and improvising on the fly.

For instance, according to Dr. Gary S. Kaplan, former CEO of Virginia Mason Franciscan Health and current senior vice president of CommonSpirit Health, "The pandemic has exacerbated a worldwide healthcare staffing shortage, especially in nursing."

David Bates, chief of general internal medicine and primary care at Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital (No. 17 on Newsweek's Best Hospitals Global Leaders list) says, "We had to very rapidly convert beds to ICU beds, and close large sections of the hospital, then come up with staff to cover those beds. There were also great challenges with managing our supply chain for things like ventilators and personal protective equipment."

Dr. Christoph Meier, Director of the Department of Internal Medicine at University Hospital Zurich (No. 15 on our Global Leaders list) says, "Many lessons could be learned from COVID, such as recognizing the efficacy of virtual meetings, valuing the importance of hospital hygiene and emphasizing the importance of generalists over siloed specialization. The biggest challenge was the joint setting of individual priorities for a common goal."

Many medical institutions struggled with these and other challenges over the course of the pandemic but what has set the world's leading hospitals apart is their continued ability to deliver the highest-quality patient care and conduct critical medical research even as they focused on battling COVID. Indeed, as the fourth annual ranking of the World's Best Hospitals by Newsweek and Statista shows, consistency in excellence is the hallmark of these institutions, with familiar names dominating the list and top spots.

The hospitals that have fared best during the pandemic are those that have learned to work faster by communicating better and breaking down internal silos, according to Dr. Gregory Katz, professor of Innovation & Value in Health at the University of Paris School of Medicine: "A critical facilitator of velocity is broad participation from hospital teams. If there is one thing we take away from our fight against COVID-19, it's the value of preparation. For hospital leaders, it's all about choice, not chance."

Dr. Jens Deerberg-Wittram, CEO and president of Romed Kliniken, a German nonprofit health system, says much of that preparation comes down to being ready to pay for the nuts-and-bolts necessary to take of very sick people. "We learned over the pandemic," he says, "that those hospitals truly make a difference in a global crisis who are running expensive and resource-intense infrastructure like emergency departments, ICUs, ECMO [extracorporeal membrane oxygen machines] et cetera."

How do the leading hospitals maintain their top status in the midst of a global pandemic that has turned the medical world upside down? The ability and drive to continually innovate is key—and top talent is at the heart of that. As Bates says, "Premier hospitals remain strong largely by attracting the best people, those who are focused on developing new approaches to care and making care better."

Kaplan adds, "Top hospitals maintain their excellence by having clear and embraced missions and aspirational visions leading to constancy of purpose that is lived daily by all staff. This must be coupled with leadership constancy and consistency that creates alignment from the boardroom to the front line of care."

According to Deerberg-Wittram, "A certain intellectual mindset, an academic culture, a strong focus on patient outcomes and an inspiring environment for young talents are the ingredients for a premier hospital that lasts over decades."

This year's rankings represent an expanded universe, with three new countries on the list—Colombia, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates—bringing the total to over 2,200 hospitals in 27 countries. And the results show a remarkable cross-section of excellence across the world: Twenty one countries are represented in the global top 150. The U.S. leads with 33 hospitals, followed by Germany with 14; Italy and France with 10 each; and South Korea with eight. Overall, there were 13 new hospitals in this year's top 100. Among the biggest movers from last year's rankings were No. 14 Universitätsspital Basel, up from 35 last year; No. 28 Northwestern Memorial Hospital (58 in 2021); No. 43 Seoul's Samsung Medical Center (73) and No. 59 New York's NYU Langone Hospitals (86).

The goal of this study is to provide the best data-based comparison of hospital reputation and performance across countries. We hope this will be useful not only to patients and families seeking the best care for themselves and loved ones, but also to hospitals as they benchmark themselves against their peers during a period of unprecedented change.

Nancy Cooper Signature 2
RankHospitalScoreCityFootnote
1Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein87.85%Sao Paulo
2Hospital Sirio Libanes85.63%Sao Paulo
3Hospital Moinhos de Vento83.64%Porto Alegre
4Hospital Santa Catarina82.51%Sao Paulo
5Hospital Alemão Oswaldo Cruz81.57%Sao Paulo
6Hospital Mae de Deus81.07%Porto Alegre
7Centro Medico de Campinas80.05%Campinas
8Hospital das Clinicas da Universidade de Sao Paulo79.60%Sao Paulo
9Hospital Samaritano78.98%Sao Paulo
10BP – A Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo78.92%Sao Paulo
11Hospital do Coracao78.78%Sao Paulo
12Hospital Quinta D'or78.77%Rio De Janeiro
13Santa Casa de Misericordia Passos78.12%Passos
14Hospital Mater dei Santo Agostinho78.07%Belo Horizonte
15Hospital Ministro Costa Cavalcanti77.70%Foz Do Iguacu
16Hospital Barra D'or77.60%Rio De Janeiro
17Hospital Madre Teresa76.82%Belo Horizonte
18Vitoria Apart Hospital76.80%Serra
19Hospital Santa Paula76.63%Sao Paulo
20Hospital Felício Rocho76.33%Belo Horizonte
21Hospital Marcio Cunha76.20%Ipatinga
22Hospital Regional do Vale do Paraiba76.04%Taubate
23Sao Luiz Unidade Copa D'or75.81%Rio De Janeiro
24Biocor Instituto75.69%Belo Horizonte
25Hospital Pompéia75.65%Caxias Do Sul
26Hospital Adventista de Manaus75.55%Manaus
27Hospital Vila da Serra75.55%Vila Da Serra
28Hospital Santa Lúcia Sul75.43%Brasilia
29Santa Casa de Misericordia Maceio75.42%Maceio
30Sao Luiz Unidade Morumbi74.93%Sao Paulo
31CHN Complexo Hospitalar de Niterói74.87%Niteroi
32Sao Luiz Unidade Analia Franco74.85%Sao Paulo
33Hospital Santa Casa Montes Claros - MG74.68%Montes Claros
34Hospital Jorge Valente74.57%Salvador
35Hospital 9 de Julho74.48%Sao Paulo
36Hospital Alianca74.46%Salvador
37Hospital Esperanca Olinda74.43%Olinda
38Hospital Santa Lúcia Hospital do Coracao74.19%Pocos De Caldas
39Hospital Unimed Recife III74.04%Recife
40Hospital Regional Unimed74.03%Fortaleza
41Hospital Unimed Caxias do Sul73.94%Caxias Do Sul
42Hospital Santa Luzia73.89%Brasilia
43Hospital Santa Izabel73.86%Salvador
44Hospital Divina Providencia73.86%Porto Alegre
45Hospital E Maternidade Sao Joaquim73.80%Franca
46Hospital Evangélico de Vila Velha73.77%Vila Velha
47Hospital Anchieta Ltda73.71%Taguatinga
48Hospital Oeste D'or73.58%Rio De Janeiro
49Hospital Infante Dom Henrique73.57%Sao Jose Do Rio Preto
50Santa Casa de Misericordia Porto Alegre73.47%Porto Alegre
51Hospital Monte Sinai73.24%Juiz De Fora
52Hospital Unimed Unidade Contorno73.01%Belo Horizonte
53IMIP72.67%Recife
54Hospital Meridional72.40%Cariacica
55Hospital Parana72.21%Maringa
56Santa Casa de Misericórdia de Juiz de Fora72.17%Juiz De Fora
57Hospital Pilar72.14%Curitiba
58Hospital Santa Marta71.81%Taguatinga
59Hospital Alvorada Moema71.38%Sao Paulo
60Hospital Pitangueiras71.35%Jundiai
61Hospital Sao Francisco Ribeirao Preto71.16%Ribeirao Preto
62Hospital de Ensino da UNIFESP71.05%Sao Paulo
63Hospital Sao Lucas71.02%Ribeirão Preto
64Hospital Santa Joana Recife70.75%Recife
65Hospital Santa Isabel70.71%Blumenau
66Hospital Sao Camilo Pompeia70.40%Sao Paulo2
67Sao Luiz Unidade Itaim69.79%Sao Paulo
68Hospital Brasilia69.74%Lago Sul
69Hospital Nipo-Brasileiro69.46%Sao Paulo
70Hospital Sao Vicente de Paulo69.42%Rio De Janeiro
71Hospital Santa Catarina69.36%Blumenau
72Hospital Bandeirantes69.08%Sao Paulo
73Hospital de Clínicas de Passo Fundo68.88%Passo Fundo
74Real Hospital Portugues68.86%Recife
75Santa Casa de Santos68.86%Santos
76Maternidade Santa Maria da Cruz Azul68.50%Sao Paulo
77Hospital Rios D'or68.33%Rio De Janeiro
78Hospital Esperanca Recife68.06%Recife
79Centro Hospitalar Unimed68.03%Joinville
80Hospital Santa Rita de Cassia Vitoria67.96%Vitoria
81Hospital de Clinicas67.86%Porto Alegre
82Hospital Vera Cruz67.77%Campinas
83Hospital Sao Camilo Ipiranga67.67%Sao Paulo
84Hospital E Maternidade Brasil67.62%Santo Andre
85Hospital Sao Lucas67.51%Aracaju
86Hospital Geral67.49%Caxias Do Sul
87Hospital Sao Lucas da Pucrs67.48%Porto Alegre
88Hospital Sao Vicente de Paulo67.46%Passo Fundo
89Hospital Dona Helena67.45%Joinville
90Hospital Nossa Senhora da Conceicao67.42%Porto Alegre
91Hospital Unimed Volta Redonda67.36%Volta Redonda
92Hospital Unimed Vitória67.32%Vitória
93Hospital da Luz67.08%Sao Paulo
94Hospital Portugues66.86%Salvador
95Hospital Bruno Born66.59%Lajeado
96Hospital Sao Paulo Ribeirao Preto66.41%Ribeirao Preto
Licensing Information: If your hospital is listed above, you can find out more about the licensing options visiting the Statista website.

Global Board of Medical Experts:

The global board of medical experts was founded by Statista to support the World's Best Hospitals Project. The board is an independent body that is tasked with the continuous development of the quality and scope of the project. Current members of the board of experts are listed here.



Methodology

The World's Best Hospitals 2022 ranking lists the best hospitals in 27 countries: U.S.,- Germany, Japan, South Korea, France, Italy, United Kingdom, Spain, Brazil, Canada, India, Australia, Mexico, The Netherlands, Austria, Thailand, Switzerland, Sweden, Belgium, Finland, Norway, Denmark, Israel, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Colombia.The countries were selected based on multiple comparability factors, such as standard of living/life expectancy,population size, number of hospitals and data availability. The lists are based on three data sources:
1. Over 80,0000 medical experts (doctors, hospitals managers, health care professionals) in 27 countries were invited to participate in the online survey. Participants were asked to recommend hospitals in their own country as well as in other countries. Recommendations for own employer/ hospital were not allowed.
2. Results from patient experience surveys. Publicly available data from existing patient surveys was used to analyze patient experience.Patient surveys are typically conducted by insurance companies among patients after hospitalization. Examples of survey topics include: general satisfaction with hospital, recommendation of hospital and satisfaction with medical care.
3. Medical key performance indicators (KPIs) on hospitals e.g., data on quality of treatment and hygiene measures.KPIs from a variety of public sources were collected for most countries. KPIs differ between the countries. Examples of included data are data on quality of care for specific treatments, data on hygiene measures and patient safety and data on number of patients per doctors and per nurse.

Scores were calculated for each hospital in each of the three categories and weighted: Peer recommendation (50% national, 5% international), patient experience (15%), medical KPIs (30%).

Every hospital in each country is rated by a score. Scores are only comparable between hospitals in the same country, because different sources for patient experience and medical KPIs were examined in each country. Since it was not possible to harmonize this data, cross-country comparisons of the scores are not possible (a score of 90 in country A doesn't necessarily mean that this hospital is better than a hospital with a score of 87 in country B).

The preliminary rankings were sent to an international network of medical journalists for plausibility checks. A global board of renowned medical experts validated the rankings.

The number of hospitals awarded in each country varies based on the number of hospitals and data availability in the respective country. The U.S. had the most hospitals awarded with 420, while Israel and Singapore were represented with 10 hospitals each. In total, more than 2,200 hospitals were ranked for this fourth edition of the ranking.

The online edition of this study includes a Global Top 250 list. The list includes a ranking of the 150 best global hospitals, ranks 151–250 are sorted alphabetically. The top 150 were determined by the number of international recommendations received and their national rank. Ranks 151 through 250 consist of the next best hospitals in each country. They are sorted alphabetically because the data is too heterogeneous between countries to allow for further cross-country comparison. The global list does not include specialized hospitals.

The rankings are comprised exclusively of hospitals that are eligible regarding the scope described in this article. A mention in the ranking is a positive recognition based on peer recommendations and publicly available data sources at the time. The ranking is the result of an elaborate process which, due to the interval of data-collection and analysis, is a reflection of the last calendar year. Furthermore, events preceding or following the period 01/01/2021–12/31/2021 and/or pertaining to individual persons affiliated/associated to the facilities were not included in the metrics. As such, the results of this ranking should not be used as the sole source of information for future deliberations. The information provided in this ranking should be considered in conjunction with other available information about hospitals or, if possible, accompanied by a visit to a facility. The quality of hospitals that are not included in the rankings is not disputed. The full rankings and methodology are available online.


Download the methodology overview here.
Download the extended methodology here.


Disclaimer:
The rankings are comprised exclusively of hospitals that are eligible regarding the scope described in this article. A mention in the ranking is a positive recognition based on peer recommendations and publicly available data sources at the time. The ranking is the result of an elaborate process which, due to the interval of data-collection and analysis, is a reflection of the last calendar year. Furthermore, events preceding or following the period 01/01/2021-31/12/2021 and/or pertaining to individual persons affiliated/associated to the facilities were not included in the metrics. As such, the results of this ranking should not be used as the sole source of information for future deliberations. The information provided in this ranking should be considered in conjunction with other available information about hospitals or, if possible, accompanied by a visit to a facility. The quality of hospitals that are not included in the rankings is not disputed.

Footnotes:
1 - No medical KPI was used to determine the score for these hospitals. Their scores relies on patient satisfaction data and recommendations from medical experts.
2 - No patient satisfaction data was used to determine the score for these hospitals. Their scores relies on results from medical KPIs and recommendations from medical experts.