Black Health
Acute Care Birthing-friendly

Waterbury Hospital

64 Robbins St, Waterbury, CT 06721 · (203) 573-6000

CMS rating

3/5

Overall hospital rating

Ownership

For-profit

Proprietary

CMS Provider #

070005

Source: CMS Hospital Compare

CMS Hospital Compare measure groups

Mortality

7

measures reported

1 better than national

Safety

6

measures reported

2 better than national

Readmission

8

measures reported

Patient experience

8

HCAHPS dimensions

Timely & effective

11

measures reported

Waterbury Hospital in context

WATERBURY HOSPITAL is an acute-care hospital in Waterbury, Connecticut, running as a for-profit hospital. The facility is Medicare-certified under CMS Certification Number 070005, which is the join key across Hospital Compare, MACRA, and most state discharge scorecards.

CMS Hospital Compare assigns this facility an overall rating of 3 of 5 stars — at the national median. On measure groups versus the national rate, the facility is: 1 better of 7 mortality; 2 better of 6 safety; 8 readmission measures reported with none flagged. CMS's composite rating weights mortality, safety, readmission, patient experience, and timely & effective care across all reporting measures; it is not stratified by patient race.

Operationally: WATERBURY HOSPITAL operates an emergency department (EMTALA-covered, which means it must screen and stabilize any patient regardless of ability to pay), and the CMS Birthing-Friendly designation, which requires attesting to the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health (AIM) obstetric safety bundles.

Statewide context: Connecticut's Office of Health Strategy publishes hospital pricing transparency files and the State Innovation Model's equity scorecard. Yale New Haven Health covers roughly 40% of statewide admissions.

For Black patients

If you are a Black patient being seen at WATERBURY HOSPITAL in Waterbury, Connecticut, a few concrete steps:

  • Bring an advocate. National data from CDC's Black maternal mortality review show the single biggest reduction in missed-diagnosis rates comes from a second set of ears in the room — a partner, a doula, a family member. Ask in advance that they be credentialed as a visitor; the hospital cannot turn away a designated support person.
  • If you need ongoing primary care, our Connecticut provider directory filters to physicians who accept Medicaid and speak Spanish / Haitian Creole / ASL where relevant. Filter to your insurance first.
  • If the hospital doesn't take your coverage, the closest Federally Qualified Health Center is listed under our FQHCs in this area. FQHCs serve every patient on a sliding-fee scale regardless of insurance status.
  • For help paying for care, the state Medicaid navigator at /medicaid/connecticut/ explains eligibility, documents, and how to apply (same-day presumptive eligibility for pregnancy).
  • If you are treated dismissively or your pain is ignored, every Medicare-certified hospital is required by CMS Conditions of Participation (42 CFR 482.13) to have a grievance procedure; file in writing and request the CMS regional office contact if the hospital ombuds does not respond within seven days.

References & primary sources

  • CMS Hospital Compare — Hospital General Information (the primary source for overall star rating, measure-group counts, ownership, ER, birthing-friendly flag): data.cms.gov/provider-data/dataset/xubh-q36u.
  • CMS Care Compare facility profile — this hospital's public page: Care Compare.gov search by CCN.
  • 42 CFR Part 482 — Medicare Conditions of Participation for Hospitals (source for grievance-procedure rights + EMTALA): ecfr.gov / Title 42 Part 482.
  • Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health (AIM) — the obstetric safety bundles underlying the CMS Birthing-Friendly designation: saferbirth.org.

Data refreshed: