Does a higher waived-test tier always mean better care?
Not always. Higher tier suggests more testing throughput, but the best choice still depends on specialist access, care coordination, and your disease pathway.
Hospital Profile & Patient Preparation Guide
This detail page is built from public CMS hospital records and optimized for practical patient use. It highlights care setting, ownership, emergency capability, and lab accreditation signals, then connects users to ClinBox for appointment-ready case preparation.
Official References
Fast-read profile for patients preparing questions before the next visit.
This profile has a published overall rating but no emergency-service flag. It is suitable for planned care; keep a separate urgent-care plan.
Tiered interpretation based on CMS reported annual waived-test volume.
The CMS-116 CLIA form defines this as the estimated annual waived-test volume. It describes reported testing activity, not overall hospital quality by itself.
A high annual waived-test volume is reported.
This often reflects strong rapid-testing throughput for high-demand settings. You should still verify specialty test availability by condition.
Use this as an access signal, then confirm disease-specific specialist pathways and follow-up continuity.
View CMS-116 source fieldEach field shows whether that accreditation is reported in CMS records, plus what it implies for patient-side verification.
A2LA is a CLIA-recognized lab accreditor; this flag shows if A2LA status is reported, which indicates whether that quality pathway is documented for this lab scope.
AABB covers transfusion and biotherapies standards; this flag indicates whether AABB accreditation is reported, helping you verify blood-service governance.
CAP is a major CLIA-recognized accreditor; a reported status usually means structured external quality oversight is present for covered disciplines.
COLA is a CLIA-recognized accreditation pathway; reported status suggests external compliance oversight is documented for the lab services in scope.
ASHI relates to histocompatibility/immunogenetics standards; this flag shows if ASHI status is reported, useful when transplant-related testing is relevant.
Upload a report or image to generate a structured case summary in ClinBox.
Please remove personal identifiers before upload. ClinBox helps organize case information and does not provide diagnosis.
Dynamic checklist version: W3
Condition-focused questions selected for this hospital page.
Not always. Higher tier suggests more testing throughput, but the best choice still depends on specialist access, care coordination, and your disease pathway.
Emergency services are not reported as available in this dataset. It confirms the reported emergency flag, but for your condition you should still call to verify specialty coverage and transfer workflow.
Bring your diagnosis timeline, key labs/imaging, and recent medication changes first; this improves triage clarity and shortens repeated questioning.
Tier W3 reflects the reported scale of waived testing activity, which helps you estimate rapid-test workflow intensity but does not equal overall hospital quality.