Hospital Profile

North Texas Medical Center

1900 Hospital Blvd
Gainesville, TX 76240
★★★★☆
4/5 CMS Overall Rating
60
Licensed Beds
Acute Care
Hospital Type
125
Affiliated Doctors
None Reported
Critical Care
1.1:1
Nurse-to-Bed Ratio
Data Source: Hospital data from CMS Hospital Compare (February 2026) and Provider of Services file (Q4 2025). Doctor affiliations from CMS Physician Compare. Quality measures are updated quarterly.
Reviewed by: Wes Ward, Founder & Data Lead • View our methodology

Hospital Details

North Texas Medical Center is a 4.00-star acute care hospital located in Gainesville, Texas with 60 licensed beds. As a private non-profit, its revenue is reinvested into patient care and community programs.

A 4-star CMS rating places North Texas Medical Center above the national average for overall quality. 125 physicians are affiliated with this facility, and it provides emergency services. It reports a 1.1:1 nurse-to-bed ratio.

Hospital Type Acute Care Hospitals
Ownership Voluntary non-profit - Private
Teaching Status Non-Teaching Hospital

Quality Ratings & Measures

CMS evaluates hospitals across five quality domains. Here's how North Texas Medical Center compares:

4
Overall Rating
of 5 stars
💔
Same as National
Mortality
0 of 4 better
🛡️
Better than National
Safety
1 of 2 better
🔄
Better than National
Readmission
1 of 7 better
😊
All 8 domains reported
Patient Experience
8 measures
💰
1.0400
Medicare Spending Index (MSPB)
Above National Avg (Higher Spending)

Quality data from CMS Hospital Compare. "Better than national" means statistically significantly better than the national average. Spending uses the CMS MSPB measure (Medicare Spending Per Beneficiary) index, where 1.000 is national average and values above/below 1.000 indicate higher/lower spending.

Patient Experience (HCAHPS Survey)

The HCAHPS survey is a standardized, national survey of hospital patients. It measures how patients perceive their care — including communication with doctors and nurses, responsiveness of staff, cleanliness, and discharge information. Higher percentages indicate better performance.

MeasureScoreStar Rating
Patients who reported that their room and bathroom were "Always" clean71%N/A
Patients who reported that their room and bathroom were "Sometimes" or "Never" clean7%N/A
Patients who reported that their room and bathroom were "Usually" clean22%N/A
Cleanliness - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Cleanliness - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★☆ (4)
Patients who reported that their nurses "Always" communicated well85%N/A
Nurse communication - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Sometimes" or "Never" communicated well2%N/A
Nurse communication - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★★ (5)
Patients who reported that their nurses "Usually" communicated well13%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Always" communicated well79%N/A
Doctor communication - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Sometimes" or "Never" communicated well6%N/A
Doctor communication - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★☆☆ (3)
Patients who reported that their doctors "Usually" communicated well15%N/A
Patients who reported that staff "Always" explained about medicines before giving it to them65%N/A
Communication about medicines - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Patients who reported that staff "Sometimes" or "Never" explained about medicines before giving it to them16%N/A
Communication about medicines - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★☆ (4)
Patients who reported that staff "Usually" explained about medicines before giving it to them19%N/A
Discharge information - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Patients who reported that NO, they were not given information about what to do during their recovery at home11%N/A
Discharge information - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★☆ (4)
Patients who reported that YES, they were given information about what to do during their recovery at home89%N/A
Patients who reported that NO, they did not discuss whether they would need help after discharge11%N/A
Patients who reported that YES, they did discuss whether they would need help after discharge89%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Always" explained things in a way they could understand74%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Sometimes" or "Never" explained things in a way they could understand6%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Usually" explained things in a way they could understand20%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Always" listened carefully to them76%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Sometimes" or "Never" listened carefully to them7%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Usually" listened carefully to them17%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Always" treated them with courtesy and respect85%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Sometimes" or "Never" treated them with courtesy and respect5%N/A
Patients who reported that their doctors "Usually" treated them with courtesy and respect10%N/A
Patients who gave their hospital a rating of 6 or lower on a scale from 0 (lowest) to 10 (highest)5%N/A
Patients who gave their hospital a rating of 7 or 8 on a scale from 0 (lowest) to 10 (highest)26%N/A
Patients who gave their hospital a rating of 9 or 10 on a scale from 0 (lowest) to 10 (highest)69%N/A
Overall hospital rating - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Overall hospital rating - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★☆ (4)
Patients who reported that when receiving new medication the staff "Always" communicated what the medication was for77%N/A
Patients who reported that when receiving new medication the staff "Sometimes" or "Never" communicated what the medication was for7%N/A
Patients who reported that when receiving new medication the staff "Usually" communicated what the medication was for.16%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Always" explained things in a way they could understand81%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Sometimes" or "Never" explained things in a way they could understand3%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Usually" explained things in a way they could understand16%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Always" listened carefully to them82%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Sometimes" or "Never" listened carefully to them2%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Usually" listened carefully to them16%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Always" treated them with courtesy and respect91%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Sometimes" or "Never" treated them with courtesy and respect1%N/A
Patients who reported that their nurses "Usually" treated them with courtesy and respect8%N/A
Patients who reported that the area around their room was "Always" quiet at night69%N/A
Patients who reported that the area around their room was "Sometimes" or "Never" quiet at night4%N/A
Patients who reported that the area around their room was "Usually" quiet at night27%N/A
Quietness - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Quietness - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★☆ (4)
Patients who reported NO, they would probably not or definitely not recommend the hospital3%N/A
Patients who reported YES, they would definitely recommend the hospital70%N/A
Recommend hospital - linear mean scoreNot Applicable%N/A
Patients who reported YES, they would probably recommend the hospital27%N/A
Recommend hospital - star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★☆ (4)
Patients who reported that when receiving new medication the staff "Always" discussed possible side effects53%N/A
Patients who reported that when receiving new medication the staff "Sometimes" or "Never" discussed possible side effects24%N/A
Patients who reported that when receiving new medication the staff "Usually" discussed possible side effects23%N/A
Summary star ratingNot Applicable%★★★★☆ (4)
Patients who reported that NO, they did not receive written information about possible symptoms to look out for after discharge10%N/A
Patients who reported that YES, they did receive written information about possible symptoms to look out for after discharge90%N/A

Survey response rate: 30% (345 surveys completed). Data from 04/01/2024 to 03/31/2025 .

Services & Specialties

North Texas Medical Center offers the following services based on CMS Provider of Services data:

Emergency & Critical Care

North Texas Medical Center offers 0 of 8 possible critical care capabilities, classified as None Reported. No critical care capabilities are reported for this facility. If emergency access is important to your coverage, explore the nearby hospitals for alternatives.

No emergency/critical care services reported

Surgical Services

🏢 Outpatient Surgery

Specialty Services

👶 Neonatal Nursery
🌬️ Respiratory Care

Service availability is self-reported by the facility. Confirm specific services directly with the hospital. Use our printable question list to prepare for the conversation.

Bed Count, Capacity & Staffing

North Texas Medical Center has 60 licensed beds (60 Medicare-certified) with a nurse-to-bed ratio of 1.1:1. Higher ratios generally indicate more nursing staff per patient, which research links to better outcomes in medication errors, patient falls, and response times.

Bed Type Count
Total Licensed Beds60
CMS Certified Beds60
Staffing snapshot: 125 affiliated physicians • 65 registered nurses • 4 operating rooms

Doctors Affiliated with North Texas Medical Center

125 physicians are affiliated with North Texas Medical Center, including 23 surgeons. Doctor affiliations are sourced from CMS Physician Compare data and indicate physicians who have a formal relationship with this hospital.

125
Total Doctors
29
Procedural Specialists
23
Surgeons

Featured Affiliated Physicians

Stephen R. Tolhurst
Spinal fusion
NPI: 1023234655
Richard W. Jolly
Cataract surgery
NPI: 1376541169
Akwasi O. Boah
Spinal fusion
NPI: 1184884900
Michael S. Hisey
Spinal fusion
NPI: 1346283348
Nikhil S. Joshi
Leg revascularization (restoring blood flow)
NPI: 1437253481
Christopher B. Cianci
Coronary angioplasty and stenting
NPI: 1730496720

Showing 125 of 125 affiliated physicians. Doctor affiliations from CMS Physician Compare data.

Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAI)

Healthcare-associated infections are one of the most important safety metrics when evaluating a hospital. These infections are acquired during a hospital stay, not the reason for admission. CMS tracks rates for specific infection types and compares each hospital to the national benchmark.

Infection TypeScore (SIR)vs. National
Central Line Associated Bloodstream Infection (ICU + select Wards): Lower Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
Central Line Associated Bloodstream Infection (ICU + select Wards): Upper Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
Central Line Associated Bloodstream Infection: Number of Device Days978Not Available
Central Line Associated Bloodstream Infection (ICU + select Wards): Predicted Cases0.600Not Available
Central Line Associated Bloodstream Infection (ICU + select Wards): Observed Cases0Not Available
Central Line Associated Bloodstream Infection (ICU + select Wards)Not AvailableNot Available
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections (ICU + select Wards): Lower Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections (ICU + select Wards): Upper Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections (ICU + select Wards): Number of Urinary Catheter Days1540Not Available
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections (ICU + select Wards): Predicted Cases0.775Not Available
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections (ICU + select Wards): Observed Cases0Not Available
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections (ICU + select Wards)Not AvailableNot Available
SSI - Colon Surgery: Lower Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
SSI - Colon Surgery: Upper Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
SSI - Colon Surgery: Number of Procedures1Not Available
SSI - Colon Surgery: Predicted Cases0.026Not Available
SSI - Colon Surgery: Observed Cases0Not Available
SSI - Colon SurgeryNot AvailableNot Available
SSI - Abdominal Hysterectomy: Lower Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
SSI - Abdominal Hysterectomy: Upper Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
SSI - Abdominal Hysterectomy: Number of Procedures1Not Available
SSI - Abdominal Hysterectomy: Predicted Cases0.008Not Available
SSI - Abdominal Hysterectomy: Observed Cases0Not Available
SSI - Abdominal HysterectomyNot AvailableNot Available
MRSA Bacteremia: Lower Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
MRSA Bacteremia: Upper Confidence LimitNot AvailableNot Available
MRSA Bacteremia: Patient Days6742Not Available
MRSA Bacteremia: Predicted Cases0.162Not Available
MRSA Bacteremia: Observed Cases1Not Available
MRSA BacteremiaNot AvailableNot Available
Clostridium Difficile (C.Diff): Lower Confidence Limit0.211No Different than National Benchmark
Clostridium Difficile (C.Diff): Upper Confidence Limit2.262No Different than National Benchmark
Clostridium Difficile (C.Diff): Patient Days6374No Different than National Benchmark
Clostridium Difficile (C.Diff): Predicted Cases3.610No Different than National Benchmark
Clostridium Difficile (C.Diff): Observed Cases3No Different than National Benchmark
Clostridium Difficile (C.Diff)0.831No Different than National Benchmark

How to read this: "Better than national" means the hospital's infection rate is statistically significantly lower than the national average — a sign of strong infection-control protocols (hand hygiene, sterilization, catheter management). "Worse than national" may warrant asking the hospital about their improvement initiatives.

Infection data reported to the CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN).

Complications & Deaths

CMS tracks post-surgical complications and mortality rates for common procedures and conditions (heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia, hip/knee replacement, and more). These measures reflect how patients actually fare at this hospital compared to the national average.

MeasureScorePatientsvs. National
Rate of complications for hip/knee replacement patients3.226No Different Than the National Rate
Hybrid Hospital-Wide All-Cause Risk Standardized Mortality Rate4.6246No Different Than the National Rate
Death rate for heart attack patientsN/AN/ANumber of Cases Too Small
Death rate for CABG surgery patientsN/AN/ANot Available
Death rate for COPD patients8.446No Different Than the National Rate
Death rate for heart failure patients1150No Different Than the National Rate
Death rate for pneumonia patients14.3147No Different Than the National Rate
Death rate for stroke patients13.627No Different Than the National Rate
Pressure ulcer rate1.06862No Different Than the National Rate
Death rate among surgical inpatients with serious treatable complicationsN/AN/ANumber of Cases Too Small
Iatrogenic pneumothorax rate0.27952No Different Than the National Rate
In-hospital fall-associated fracture rate0.26941No Different Than the National Rate
Postoperative hemorrhage or hematoma rate2.3184No Different Than the National Rate
Postoperative acute kidney injury requiring dialysis rate1.6735No Different Than the National Rate
Postoperative respiratory failure rate12.0534No Different Than the National Rate
Perioperative pulmonary embolism or deep vein thrombosis rate3.9085No Different Than the National Rate
Postoperative sepsis rate5.2231No Different Than the National Rate
Postoperative wound dehiscence rateN/AN/ANumber of Cases Too Small
Abdominopelvic accidental puncture or laceration rate1.0546No Different Than the National Rate
CMS Medicare PSI 90: Patient safety and adverse events composite1.21N/ANo Different Than the National Value

What to consider: A "worse than national" rating on mortality or complications is a serious signal — particularly for elective procedures where you have time to choose a facility. For emergency care, proximity and speed often outweigh these metrics. Ask the hospital about their outcomes for your specific procedure.

Readmissions & Unplanned Hospital Visits

A readmission means a patient returned to the hospital within 30 days of discharge. High readmission rates can signal gaps in discharge planning, patient education, or follow-up care coordination. CMS penalizes hospitals with excess readmissions through the HRRP.

MeasureScorePatientsvs. National
Hospital return days for heart attack patientsN/A0Number of Cases Too Small
Hospital return days for heart failure patients-5652Fewer Days Than Average per 100 Discharges
Hospital return days for pneumonia patients-7.2159Average Days per 100 Discharges
Hybrid Hospital-Wide All-Cause Readmission Measure (HWR)14.9412No Different Than the National Rate
Rate of unplanned hospital visits after colonoscopy (per 1,000 colonoscopies)12.4473No Different Than the National Rate
Rate of inpatient admissions for patients receiving outpatient chemotherapyN/A0Not Available
Rate of emergency department (ED) visits for patients receiving outpatient chemotherapyN/A0Not Available
Ratio of unplanned hospital visits after hospital outpatient surgery0.952No Different than expected
Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) 30-Day Readmission RateN/A0Number of Cases Too Small
Rate of readmission for CABGN/A0Not Available
Rate of readmission for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients1854No Different Than the National Rate
Heart failure (HF) 30-Day Readmission Rate19.252No Different Than the National Rate
Rate of readmission after hip/knee replacement4.827No Different Than the National Rate
Pneumonia (PN) 30-Day Readmission Rate15.2159No Different Than the National Rate

What to ask: If this hospital has higher-than-average readmission rates, ask about their discharge process — do they provide follow-up appointments, medication reconciliation, and clear care instructions before you leave?

Nearby Hospitals

If North Texas Medical Center isn't in your Medicare plan's network — or you want to compare quality ratings before a procedure — these are the closest alternatives within 15 miles:

Muenster Memorial Hospital

12.6 miles
Not Rated N/A
Muenster, TX · 18 beds

View all hospitals near 76240, OK →

Switching hospitals may mean switching plans. Check the Medicare enrollment timeline to make sure you don't miss your window, and use our enrollment checklist to stay organized.

Location & Directions

Address: 1900 Hospital Blvd, Gainesville, TX 76240
Phone: (940) 612-8600

Get directions on Google Maps →

What to Do with This Information

Hospital quality data is most useful when paired with your specific situation. Here's how to act on it:

  • Check network status: Before choosing this hospital, verify it's in-network for your Medicare Advantage plan. Out-of-network care can cost significantly more.
  • Ask about specific outcomes: If you're considering an elective procedure, ask the hospital for their outcomes data on that specific surgery — not just overall ratings.
  • Compare nearby options: Use the nearby hospitals section above to compare quality scores across facilities in the area.
  • Review your Medicare plan: Your plan's network determines which hospitals you can access affordably. Use our enrollment checklist to stay organized if you're switching plans. Check enrollment deadlines →
  • Talk to your doctor: Ask your primary care physician which hospitals they're affiliated with and whether they're in-network for your plan. Print our doctor questions checklist →
View on Medicare.gov Compare Medicare Plans in 76240, OK →

North Texas Medical Center: Common Questions

What does a 4-star rating mean for North Texas Medical Center?

CMS rates hospitals on a 1-to-5 star scale based on quality measures across mortality, safety, readmission, patient experience, and timely care. A 4-star rating places this hospital above the national average. The rating is updated quarterly by CMS.

Does North Texas Medical Center have an emergency room?

Yes, North Texas Medical Center operates an emergency department.

How many doctors are affiliated with North Texas Medical Center?

125 physicians are affiliated with this hospital according to CMS Physician Compare data. This includes 23 surgeons.

Does North Texas Medical Center accept Medicare?

Yes. All hospitals listed on Medicare Hospital Compare are Medicare-certified facilities. However, whether this hospital is in-network for your specific Medicare Advantage plan depends on your plan's provider network. Check your plan documents or call your insurer to verify.

How many beds does North Texas Medical Center have?

North Texas Medical Center has 60 licensed beds. Bed count is an indicator of hospital capacity — larger hospitals often offer more specialized services.

Where does the data on this page come from?

All data is sourced from official CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) databases: Hospital Compare for quality measures and star ratings, Provider of Services for beds and services, and Physician Compare for doctor affiliations. Data is updated quarterly. Read our full methodology →

About the Reviewer

Wes Ward

Wes Ward

Founder & Data Lead

Wes Ward is the founder of InsuranceDataNow.org and reviews all hospital quality data and methodology for accuracy. Every hospital profile — including the CMS quality measures, infection rates, and doctor affiliations on this page — goes through his data-validation pipeline before publication.

With 25+ years in data analytics — including work with highly regulated genomic data at Ancestry.com — Wes brings enterprise-level rigor to healthcare transparency. He is also a co-founder of BestNeighborhood.org, CrimeGrade.org, and ISPReports.org.

View full profile →LinkedIn

Data sources: CMS Hospital Compare (February 2026), Provider of Services (Q4 2025), CMS Physician Compare, CDC NHSN. This page is for informational purposes only. Always verify information directly with the hospital. Read our full methodology →

Medicare Resources

Hospital quality data is just one piece of the Medicare puzzle. Explore our guides to make the best decisions for your coverage:

Does your Medicare plan cover North Texas Medical Center?

Compare Plans in 76240, OK →