

Newsweek Honors UVA Health University Medical Center Among America’s Best Specialized Hospitals
Newsweek has named nine specialties at UVA Health University Medical Center and UVA Health Children’s to the national news publication’s 2025 lists of America’s Best Specialized Hospitals and America’s Best Children’s Hospitals.
“One of our goals in UVA Health’s 10-year strategic plan is to create destination programs that enable residents from across Virginia to receive world-class care close to home,” says Mitchell H. Rosner, MD, MACP, FRCP, interim Executive Vice President for Health Affairs at the University of Virginia. “These honors from Newsweek highlight the incredible care provided by teams across the medical center.”
The criteria used to assemble the rankings include hospital quality metrics, surveys of specialists in each field, and patient experience surveys.
Here’s where University Medical Center ranks nationally, with seven specialties also rated No. 1 in Virginia:
- America’s best children’s hospitals:
- America’s best orthopedic hospitals: No. 32 (No.1 in Virginia)
- America’s best neurological hospitals: No. 41 (No.1 in Virginia)
- America’s best cancer hospitals: No. 45 (No.1 in Virginia)
- America’s best cardiac hospitals: No. 45 (No.1 in Virginia)
- America’s best pulmonary hospitals: No. 73
- America’s best endocrine hospitals: No. 109
“Our team has an incredible commitment to providing the highest quality care for every patient, every day,” says Wendy Horton, PharmD, MBA, FACHE, CEO, UVA Health University Medical Center. “Receiving these honors are a reflection of our team members’ outstanding dedication and expertise.”
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Comment from Greg Patterson, RN:
“I would love to see UVA as the Number 1 Hospital in Functional and Integrative Medicine and Prevention of illness. Especially a state-of-the-art and researched-based diet for patients and staff not based on FDA and ADA guidelines, but on home-grown research on mitochondrial health, metabolic dysfunction, systemic inflammation, and insulin resistance. My patients cannot continue, nor can anyone or the system continue, with annual multi-million-dollar cancer bills. Cancer rates are raising in spite of our best practice models.”