The Nebraska Medical Center
Owned by Nebraska Medical Center
Omaha, Nebraska • Hospital ID 280013
How does this emergency room compare?
4h 10m
Typical Emergency Room (ER) wait time
Ranked #82 of 82 Nebraska hospitals for speed
Faster than 0% of Nebraska hospitals
Watch: Slower ER waits than Nebraska average
Watch: More patients return within 30 days
Strength: High patient satisfaction (85/100)
Faster emergency rooms nearby
Other Nebraska hospitals where patients typically wait less time:
What you need to know
Emergency Room (ER) wait time
4h 10m
⚠ 2h 18m slower than Nebraska average
Nebraska average: 1h 52m
Ranked #82 of 82
Nebraska hospitals for ER speed
Faster than 0% of Nebraska hospitals
To see how this compares across the country, view the
ER waits by state report or the
fastest ER hospitals report.
Patient safety record
28.9 out of 100 patients return within 30 days
0.6 complications per 1,000 procedures
85/100 patient satisfaction score
More readmissions+7%
Fewer complications-40%
Average experience-3%
Badges compare this hospital to others in Nebraska.
Lower readmissions and complications are better; higher patient satisfaction is better.
How we rate hospitals
We compare each hospital only to others in Nebraska. This keeps comparisons fair since different regions face different challenges—rural vs urban, teaching vs community hospitals, etc.
Better than average
Top third of Nebraska hospitals
Top third of Nebraska hospitals
About average
Middle third of Nebraska hospitals
Middle third of Nebraska hospitals
Below average
Bottom third of Nebraska hospitals
Bottom third of Nebraska hospitals
Understanding the terms
ER wait time (OP-18b): The official national measure of emergency room wait times—time from arrival until you see a doctor or nurse. Also called ED (Emergency Department) wait time.
Readmissions: When patients need to return to the hospital within 30 days of being discharged. Lower numbers are better.
Complications: Problems that happen during or after medical procedures, measured per 1,000 procedures. Lower numbers are better.
Patient satisfaction: How patients rate their overall experience on surveys conducted by CMS. Higher scores are better.
When to prioritize speed vs safety
Life-threatening: Go to the closest ER
- Severe chest pain or trouble breathing
- Heavy bleeding or major injuries
- Stroke symptoms or seizures
- Severe allergic reactions
Call 911 or go to the nearest hospital immediately.
Urgent but stable: Consider wait times
- Possible broken bones
- High fever or severe pain
- Deep cuts needing stitches
- Bad sprains or sports injuries
Compare nearby hospitals for faster care.
Data sources: Official federal datasets from CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services). Updated monthly. This information is for educational purposes and should not replace medical advice.
Questions about this data? Learn how we calculate these scores or report an error.