PHOTO: DEPOSIT PHOTOS
PHOTO: DEPOSIT PHOTOS
Jessica Perry//November 13, 2025//
New Jersey maintained its ranking on the Fall 2025 Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade, placing third nationwide for the number of “A”-graded facilities in the state.
More than half of Garden State facilities earn an A mark, according to the Nov. 13 release. New Jersey also holds distinction as having the country’s highest participation rate in the program at 100%.
Released biannually by independent nonprofit The Leapfrog Group, the Safety Grade assessment assigns a letter mark, from A–F, reflecting how well acute-care hospitals protect patients from medical errors, accidents, injuries and infections. For the fifth-consecutive round, Utah ranked first nationwide.
According to Leapfrog, preventable problems harm 1 in 4 hospital inpatients. Additionally, they cause as many as 250,000 deaths each year, the group said.
In total, 67 New Jersey hospitals took part in the evaluation. Two hospitals did not receive a safety grade because there was not enough data available: Bergen New Bridge Medical Center and The Heights University Hospital (formerly CarePoint Health Christ Hospital).
Most participants (56 facilities) saw no changes from the last Leapfrog marks, released earlier this year. Also continuing a trend from the spring: no New Jersey hospitals received an F grade in this latest release.
The breakdown:
The New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute serves as regional leader for Leapfrog.
“We are proud of the commitment to transparency and safety shown by our New Jersey hospitals,” said Adelisa Perez-Hudgins, vice president of quality at the Quality Institute. “We congratulate our ‘A’ hospitals and continue to support all hospitals working to improve patient outcomes and experiences.”
According to the New Jersey Hospital Association, statewide facilities care for more than 18 million patients each year, including 983,000 inpatient admissions.
The Leapfrog Group celebrates its 25th anniversary this year. President and CEO Leah Binder described the Safety Grade as a cornerstone of the organization’s efforts to improve health care.
Health care leaders are celebrating their success on the latest assessment. See the full Fall 2025 Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade report card and your local facility’s marks. Read more here.
For the first time, the Fall 2025 release also takes a look at how industry consolidation affects patient safety. The phenomenon is familiar in New Jersey, where combinations have reducted the number of independent facilities in recent years.
Of all facilities taking part in the survey, Leapfrog said 90% of hospitals are part of a larger health care system. The organization noted that among A earners, the instances of this kind of affiliation were slightly higher (94%). Additionally, among the 358 “Straight A” hospitals 95% are part of a larger organization.
Eleven hospitals have earned an A grade for each round since the program launched in 2012. All are affiliated with health systems. None operate in New Jersey.
Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grades are assigned to nearly 3,000 general acute-care hospitals across the nation in the spring and fall. The Safety Grade uses up to 22 national patient safety measures from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Leapfrog Hospital Survey, along with information from other supplemental data sources.