November 2007UH Case Medical Center's Medical Intensive Care Unit (MICU) and Surgical Intensive Care Unit (SICU) were awarded the Beacon Award for Critical Care Excellence.

The Beacon Award, awarded by the American Association of Critical Care Nurses two times each year, recognizes the nation's top critical care units. UH Case Medical Center's MICU is the only one in the nation to receive this distinction over three consecutive years. UH Case Medical Center's Surgical Intensive Care Unit (SICU) was also a Beacon Award recipient. UH Case Medical Center's SICU was one of only 21 units nationwide to receive the award.

October 2007 – The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services presented awards to seven Northeast Ohio hospitals, including University Hospitals and UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital, for their success in increasing organ donation rates at their facilities. Hospital executives and LifeBanc, the organ procurement organization in Northeast Ohio, received the Department's Medal of Honor for Organ Donation for achieving and sustaining a donation rate of 75 percent or more of eligible donors.

October 2007 – University Hospitals recently received three of the American Heart Association and the American Stroke Association's Get With The Guidelines (GWTG) Performance Achievement Awards – Gold, Silver and Bronze. The GWTG program is being implemented in hospitals around the country. The Coronary Artery Disease Gold Performance Achievement Award recognizes UH's commitment and success in implementing a higher standard of cardiac care. The Heart Failure Silver Performance Achievement Award signifies that UH has reached an aggressive goal of treating heart failure patients with 85 percent compliance for one year. The American Stroke Association's Stroke Bronze Performance Achievement Award recognizes UH's commitment and success in implementing a higher standard of stroke care.

October 2007 – UH Case Medical Center and the associated provider-based ambulatory sites were awarded accreditation from Joint Commission. This accreditation is a nationally recognized seal of approval which indicates that UH Case Medical Center meets high performance standards and works toward National Patient Safety Goals, set by Joint Commission. The accreditation will be valid for three years.

October 2007 – UH Case Medical Center ranked 12 th out of 83 academic medical centers in the University Health System Consortium's annual Quality and Accountability Rankings. The quality and accountability ranking assesses organizational performance across a range of important aspects of patient care including mortality, care effectiveness, safety, patient-centeredness and equity using measures developed by The Joint Commission, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

September 2007 – National Institutes of Health (NIH) awarded $64 million to Case Western Reserve University, in partnership with University Hospitals Case Medical Center, MetroHealth Medical Center and The Cleveland Clinic, to become part of a national consortium funded through NIH's Clinical and Translational Science Awards. The award is the largest award ever granted by the NIH in the region. UH and their partners will use the award to transform how clinical and translational research is conducted and provide patients with leading-edge therapies for a quicker recovery.

September 2007 – University Hospitals Case Medical Center is one of only four Ohio hospitals to have received the American Heart Association's and the American Stroke Association's Stroke Performance Achievement Award and Heart Failure Performance Achievement Award. These awards recognize CMC's success in implementing the association's quality improvement program, Get With The Guidelines.

August 2007 – University Hospitals Case Medical Center received the Surgical Care Improvement Project Commitment to Quality Award. UH Case Medical Center was one of 10 hospitals in the state to be honored with the award.

August 2007 – UH Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospitals ranked #5 in U.S. News & World Report's first stand-alone " America's Best Children's Hospitals" issue, which features a detailed ranking of the finest pediatric facilities in the United States. To be eligible for this year's rankings, a medical facility had to be classified by the National Association of Children's Hospitals and Related Institutions as a freestanding children's hospital or as a children's "hospital within a hospital" – a large, multidisciplinary pediatric service within a medical center.

July 2007 – The Association for the Accreditation of Human Research Protection Programs, Inc. (AAHRPP), has given full accreditation to University Hospitals Case Medical Center. AAHRPP is a national non-profit association working to raise the standards of protection for medical research participants. UH Case Medical Center is one of only 66 organizations nationally to receive full AAHRPP accreditation.

July 2007 – University Hospitals received high marks in the 2007 U.S. News & World Report's rankings of America's Best Hospitals' clinical programs. University Hospitals Case Medical Center was recognized among the top hospitals in America in six specialties: cancer, endocrinology, geriatrics, neurology and neurosurgery (including stroke and seizure disorders), orthopedics and urology. Out of 5,462 hospitals evaluated, only 173 met the rankings' standards in one or more specialties.

July 2007 – The Case Comprehensive Cancer Center was awarded $25.5 million by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) for continued cancer research and expanded clinical trials. The funding represents a 10 percent increase in NCI funding to the center, the only one of 40 designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers in the nation to receive an increase when many National Institutes of Health-related appropriations have been flat or declining. The $25.5 million accompanies the center's NCI redesignation as a Comprehensive Cancer Center and an outstanding rating, and will be allocated in the amount of $5.1 million each year for the next five years.

June 2007 – University Hospitals Case Medical Center has received the Sustained Performance Achievement Award for implementing the American Heart Association's Get With the Guidelines – Coronary Artery Disease (GWTG-CAD) Program. The award was bestowed in recognition of UH Case Medical Center's commitment to providing the highest quality cardiovascular and stroke care to our patients. In order to achieve this recognition, UH Case Medical Center was required to demonstrate 85 percent adherence to the GWTG-CAD performance measures for 90 consecutive days.

May 2007 – The Cuyahoga County Board of MR/DD (Mental Retardation/Developmental Disability) recently named University Hospitals an Inclusion Award Winner at their Annual Board Recognition. The Inclusion Awards honor organizations or individuals in the community that have done an outstanding job of recognizing, supporting and integrating individuals with mental retardation and developmental disabilities into their organization and/or the local community.

April 2007 – University Hospitals Case Medical Center was one of 10 Ohio hospitals to receive the SCIP 6 Commitment to Quality Award for successful efforts in a six-state collaborative to improve surgical processes of care. SCIP6, a regional subset of the national SCIP quality partnership, focuses on peer-to-peer sharing of resources, best practices and lessons learned to improve processes of surgical care and reduce surgical failure rate.

March 2007 – University Hospitals Case Medical Center was identified as a winner in Solucient's 100 Top Hospitals and was – for the second year in a row – the only recognized "major teaching hospital" in Ohio. The annual award is given to the highest performing hospitals in the nation and is based on five critical areas: clinical outcomes, patient safety, operational efficiency, financial stability and growth in patient volume.

March 2007Cleveland Magazine named 138 UH doctors "Top Docs." The magazine also ran special features on the following UH doctors: Matthew Kraay, Michele Walsh, Robert Maciunas, Marjorie Greenfield, Bahman Guyuron, Paula Silverman, Joseph Calabrese, Richard Martin, Bashar Katirji and Alan Cohen.

January 2007Child magazine editors and a Medical Advisory Board of leading pediatric experts ranked UH Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital among the top ten children's hospitals in the country. Child conducted a survey examining vital medical information including survival rates, the number of complex procedures and intricate surgeries performed, volume of research studies, efforts to reduce medical errors and the quality and training of the doctors and nurses – as well as child-friendliness, support for families and community involvement. Out of 76 hospitals, UH Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital ranked eighth in the overall survey results and third in neonatal care.