Mercy Cedar Rapids among U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals for Maternity Care for 2024

Mercy Medical Center Cedar Rapids maternity
Mercy Medical Center in Cedar Rapids. CREDIT RICHARD PRATT.

U.S. News & World Report has named Mercy Medical Center in Cedar Rapids as a 2024 High Performing hospital for Maternity Care (Uncomplicated Pregnancy).

The designation is the highest award a hospital can earn for U.S. News’ Best Hospitals for Maternity Care.

Best Hospitals for Maternity Care is an annual evaluation designed to assist expectant parents, in consultation with their prenatal care team, in making decisions about where to receive maternity care that best meets their family’s needs.

Mercy Cedar Rapids earned a High Performing designation from U.S. News in recognition of maternity care as measured by factors such as newborn complication rates.

The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City was also named as a U.S. News High Performing hospital for Maternity Care.

U.S. News evaluated hospitals from across the nation that provide labor and delivery services and submitted detailed data to the publication for analysis. An all-time high of 680 hospitals participated in this year’s U.S. News survey. Fewer than half – 46% – of all hospitals that offer maternity care and participated in the survey received a High Performing designation.

“Hospitals that receive a High Performing designation as part of Best Hospitals for Maternity Care meet a high standard in caring for parents with uncomplicated pregnancies,” said Jennifer Winston, health data scientist at U.S. News. “These hospitals have C-section rates that are 26% lower and newborn complication rates that are 37% lower than unrecognized hospitals. Parents-to-be can research their local hospitals’ performance metrics for free at health.usnews.com to help them choose where to have their baby.”

The U.S. News Best Hospitals for Maternity Care methodology is based entirely on objective measures of quality, such as C-section rates in lower-risk pregnancies, newborn complication rates, exclusive breastmilk feeding rates, early elective delivery rates, birthing-friendly practices and transparency on racial/ethnic disparities, among other measures.