Figures are rounded to the nearest hundredth of a percent and are adapted from the Commonwealth Fund’s Health System Data Center.
1. Utah — 3.73 percent
2. Oregon — 3.90 percent
3. Hawaii — 4.14 percent
4. Wyoming — 4.47 percent
5. Washington — 4.48 percent
6. Idaho — 4.49 percent
7. Arizona — 4.66 percent
8. Minnesota — 4.75 percent
9. Nevada — 4.86 percent
10. Alaska — 4.87 percent
11. Colorado — 4.92 percent
12. Vermont — 4.96 percent
13. New Mexico — 5.31 percent
14. California — 5.36 percent
15. Delaware — 5.43 percent
16. Nebraska — 5.71 percent
17. Florida — 5.80 percent
18. Wisconsin — 5.87 percent
19. Virginia — 5.91 percent
20. Iowa — 5.98 percent
21. Maine — 5.99 percent
22. New Hampshire — 6.05 percent
23. Maryland — 6.18 percent
24. Montana — 6.22 percent
25. North Dakota — 6.23 percent
26. Georgia — 6.29 percent
27. Connecticut — 6.39 percent
28. South Carolina — 6.40 percent
28. North Carolina — 6.40 percent
28. South Dakota — 6.40
31. Kansas — 6.83 percent
32. Michigan — 6.83 percent
33. Pennsylvania — 6.92 percent
34. Indiana — 7.12 percent
35. Texas — 7.14 percent
36. Missouri — 7.26 percent
37. Oklahoma — 7. 26 percent
37. District of Columbia — 7.26 percent
37. Massachusetts — 7.26 percent
40. New York — 7.27 percent
41. New Jersey — 7.35 percent
42. Illinois — 7.55 percent
43. Tennessee — 7.60 percent
44. Ohio — 7.61 percent
45. Alabama — 7.63 percent
46. Arkansas — 7.73 percent
47. Mississippi — 7.84 percent
48. Kentucky — 8.58 percent
49. Rhode Island — 8.89 percent
50. West Virginia — 9.20 percent
51. Louisiana — 9.33 percent
More Articles on Quality:
Maternal Morbidity on the Rise and Likely to Climb Even Higher
Handwashing and HAIs: What’s Holding Us Back?
79 Evidence-Based Disease, Injury Prevention Programs Recognized in New Report