PlainPharmaWatch

Top Recipient Teaching Hospitals

Teaching hospitals that received the largest total payments from pharmaceutical and device companies.

What This Ranking Tells Us

Teaching hospitals are the primary sites for industry-sponsored clinical research, and the largest recipients receive hundreds of millions in annual payments. The majority of teaching hospital payments fund clinical trials, research programs, and educational grants. Major academic medical centers like the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and Massachusetts General Hospital consistently appear at the top because they conduct the most industry-sponsored research and employ the most physician investigators.

What the Data Shows

This ranking covers 100 entries from the CMS Open Payments Public Use Files for Program Year 2024. The top-ranked entry, HOSPITAL OF THE UNIV OF PENNA, reports total received of $189.9M, while the lowest entry on the list reports $256.9K — a span that captures the full range of pharmaceutical-industry engagement within this category. The aggregate total received across all 100 ranked entries sums to $455.8M, and the average is $4.6M per entry. Large gaps between the top and bottom of a ranking are normal in Open Payments data: a small number of major pharmaceutical manufacturers, large academic medical centers, or prolific research physicians typically account for a disproportionate share of total reported transfers of value.

Concentration is a key signal in this dataset. The single top entry, HOSPITAL OF THE UNIV OF PENNA, represents 41.7% of the total received aggregated across this ranking. The top 10 entries together represent 77.2% of the total — a useful indicator of how concentrated activity is at the high end of the distribution. In pharmaceutical payment data, high concentration at the top typically reflects a handful of companies with very broad sales forces or extensive patented product portfolios, a few academic medical centers conducting the bulk of industry-sponsored clinical research, or specialist physicians earning royalties from widely-used medical devices they helped invent. A flatter distribution, by contrast, suggests that industry engagement is more evenly spread across the sector.

Every figure on this page is drawn directly from the CMS Open Payments Public Use Files, which pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers are legally required to report under the Physician Payments Sunshine Act (Section 6002 of the Affordable Care Act). The data covers general payments, research payments, and physician ownership or investment interests. Readers can verify any individual physician or teaching hospital at openpaymentsdata.cms.gov, the official CMS search tool. This ranking surfaces reported financial relationships for transparency purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, a judgment about individual prescribing practices, or evidence of any ethical or legal violation by listed parties. Many large payments fund legitimate research, consulting, and education activities that benefit patient care.

# Name Total Received
1 HOSPITAL OF THE UNIV OF PENNA Teaching Hospital $189.9M
2 DANA-FARBER CANCER INSTITUTE Teaching Hospital $72.5M
3 MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $39.9M
4 CLEVELAND CLINIC HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $9.2M
5 SEATTLE CHILDRENS HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $8.1M
6 EMORY UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $7.8M
7 CEDARS-SINAI MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $7.1M
8 LANGLEY PORTER PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $6.3M
9 INDIANA UNIVERSITY HEALTH Teaching Hospital $6.0M
10 NATIONAL JEWISH HEALTH Teaching Hospital $5.2M
11 MONTEFIORE MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $4.6M
12 DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $4.6M
13 WASHINGTON HOSPITAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $4.1M
14 BETH ISRAEL DEACONESS MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $4.0M
15 ADVENTHEALTH ORLANDO Teaching Hospital $3.8M
16 U OF U HOSPITALS & CLINICS Teaching Hospital $3.8M
17 TUFTS MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $3.6M
18 DUKE UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $3.2M
19 UNIVERSITY OF IOWA HOSP & CLINICS Teaching Hospital $3.0M
20 UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $2.7M
21 STEWARD ST. ELIZABETHS MEDICAL CTR Teaching Hospital $2.6M
22 UCI MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $2.4M
23 RONALD REAGAN UCLA Teaching Hospital $2.3M
24 MAYO CLINIC HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $2.3M
25 VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $2.1M
26 UC DAVIS MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.9M
27 CHILDRENS HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.9M
28 HACKENSACK UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.8M
29 THE CHILDRENS HOSPITAL OF PHILADELP Teaching Hospital $1.8M
30 HARTFORD HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $1.7M
31 OHSU HOSPITAL AND CLINICS Teaching Hospital $1.5M
32 MARY HITCHCOCK MEMORIAL HOSP Teaching Hospital $1.5M
33 BOSTON MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.4M
34 UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA MEDICAL CENTE Teaching Hospital $1.4M
35 MEMORIAL HERMANN TEXAS MEDICAL CNTR Teaching Hospital $1.3M
36 SCRIPPS MERCY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $1.3M
37 MASSACHUSETTS EYE AND EAR INFIRMARY Teaching Hospital $1.3M
38 PALMETTO GENERAL HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $1.3M
39 UH CLEVELAND MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.2M
40 MOUNTAIN VISTA MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.2M
41 UPMC - PRESBYTERIAN SHADYSIDE Teaching Hospital $1.2M
42 CITY OF HOPE NATIONAL MEDICAL CTR Teaching Hospital $1.2M
43 WADLEY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.2M
44 CPMC-R.K. DAVIES MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $1.1M
45 SURGICAL HOSPITAL OF OKLAHOMA Teaching Hospital $1.0M
46 MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $951.9K
47 UCSD MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $921.7K
48 CAROLINAS MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $893.8K
49 THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS MEDICAL BR. Teaching Hospital $859.2K
50 TAMPA GENERAL HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $776.1K
51 SOUTHWEST GENERAL HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $755.6K
52 CHILDRENS HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $741.1K
53 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $740.7K
54 PH PATEWOOD HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $704.4K
55 ST. JOSEPHS HOSPITAL & MEDICAL CTR Teaching Hospital $676.4K
56 EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $653.3K
57 STANFORD HEALTH CARE Teaching Hospital $606.9K
58 MORRISTOWN MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $606.5K
59 UNIVERSITY OF CO HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $604.3K
60 ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $584.2K
61 UNIVERSITY HEALTH SYSTEM Teaching Hospital $577.1K
62 RESNICK NEUROPSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL AT Teaching Hospital $554.0K
63 ATRIUM HEALTH UNION Teaching Hospital $532.9K
64 WILLIAM BEAUMONT HOSPITAL- ROYAL OAK Teaching Hospital $532.6K
65 BAYONNE MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $525.6K
66 THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $515.8K
67 GOOD SAMARITAN MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $508.8K
68 SAN MATEO MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $488.1K
69 TEMPLE UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $486.4K
70 U OF UTAH NEUROPSYCHIATRIC INSTITUTE Teaching Hospital $480.2K
71 CHRISTIANA CARE HEALTH SYSTEM Teaching Hospital $465.1K
72 RIVERSIDE METHODIST HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $456.2K
73 KALEIDA HEALTH Teaching Hospital $451.7K
74 LEHIGH VALLEY Teaching Hospital $445.8K
75 BATON ROUGE GENERAL Teaching Hospital $440.6K
76 THOMAS JEFFERSON UNIV. HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $426.8K
77 STEWARD HOLY FAMILY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $425.2K
78 MEMORIAL HOSPITAL FOR CANCER AND ALL Teaching Hospital $402.3K
79 HOWARD UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $390.6K
80 CARILION MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $383.4K
81 READING HOSPITAL AND MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $380.4K
82 UAMS MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $360.5K
83 OSF HEART OF MARY MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $354.8K
84 UHS HOSPITALS Teaching Hospital $346.8K
85 BARNES-JEWISH HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $337.3K
86 BROWARD HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $335.6K
87 SINAI HOSPITAL OF BALTIMORE INC. Teaching Hospital $331.8K
88 MAIMONIDES MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $325.4K
89 YALE-NEW HAVEN HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $320.8K
90 METROHEALTH MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $310.2K
91 UT SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY HOSP Teaching Hospital $309.8K
92 NEW YORK PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $295.2K
93 CHILDRENS HOSPITAL COLORADO Teaching Hospital $290.7K
94 ESKENAZI HEALTH Teaching Hospital $281.6K
95 ERLANGER MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $279.0K
96 UMASS MEMORIAL MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $276.1K
97 TRUMBULL MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Teaching Hospital $261.3K
98 NEWARK BETH ISRAEL MEDICAL CENTER Teaching Hospital $259.2K
99 CHILDRENS HOSPITAL LOS ANGELES Teaching Hospital $259.0K
100 WEST SUBURBAN HOSP MED CTR Teaching Hospital $256.9K

Source: CMS Open Payments, Program Year 2024.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are teaching hospital payments used for?

The vast majority of teaching hospital payments fund clinical research (phase I-IV clinical trials), education and training programs, and grants for research equipment and infrastructure. These payments are typically made to the institution rather than individual physicians and support the research mission that makes academic medicine possible. Many breakthrough treatments were developed through industry-sponsored research at teaching hospitals.

Are the highest-paid hospitals the best hospitals?

There is significant correlation but not causation. The hospitals receiving the most pharmaceutical payments tend to be the most prestigious academic medical centers in the country — they attract both top talent and industry research dollars. However, payment volume reflects research activity rather than clinical quality directly. U.S. News rankings, CMS quality measures, and patient outcomes data are better measures of hospital quality.

Related

Source: CMS Open Payments Database Industry payments to physicians and teaching hospitals · 2025

How to read this leaderboard

This page is generated dynamically from the latest PlainPharmaWatch snapshot of the CMS Open Payments database. Each row reflects an entity's reported total within the selected ranking dimension — companies, states, physicians, or teaching hospitals — and is recomputed on every request so values track the underlying ETL output rather than a frozen build-time copy. CMS publishes the dataset annually, with corrected snapshots issued mid-cycle when Sunshine-Act disputes change a record set. Anywhere PlainPharmaWatch presents a payment total, the figure is reconcilable to the row-level entries in the source dataset published at openpaymentsdata.cms.gov.

The Physician Payments Sunshine Act, enacted as Section 6002 of the Affordable Care Act, requires applicable manufacturers (drug, device, biological, and medical-supply makers) and applicable group purchasing organizations to report transfers of value made to physicians and teaching hospitals. Reportable categories include consulting fees, food and beverage, travel and lodging, education, gifts, speaking compensation, charitable contributions, royalties or licenses, research-related payments, and ownership or investment interests. Some categories are excluded by statute — payments under specific de minimis thresholds, research-related transfers tied to active clinical trials, and certain product samples — and these exclusions explain why aggregate figures here do not match every alternative pharma-spending measure.

Interpreting rank changes

Rank movement between annual releases reflects two distinct phenomena. Real underlying shifts occur when a manufacturer launches a major product, exits a therapeutic area, restructures its commercial organization, or settles a Department of Justice investigation that alters its marketing approach. Reporting-level shifts occur when CMS revises submission guidelines, when applicable-manufacturer definitions change, or when a previously unreported subsidiary begins consolidated reporting. PlainPharmaWatch does not attempt to attribute rank changes to either cause — that requires looking at the underlying payment-category breakdown on each company's detail page, which itself links back to the raw CMS records.

For physicians ranked individually, year-over-year rank instability is the norm: an active clinical-trial principal investigator may receive the bulk of their reported payments in one program year and far less in adjacent years. A surgeon who licenses a successful medical device may show a sudden royalty-driven spike and then stable lower amounts thereafter. Teaching-hospital rankings tend to be more stable because they reflect institution-wide aggregates across many simultaneously active research programs.

Where to look next

Click any entity name to drill into its full per-entity detail page. Company detail pages decompose total payments by category (consulting, food, royalties, etc.) and show the top recipient physicians and teaching hospitals. State detail pages show payments split between physician and teaching-hospital recipients, plus per-physician averages and recipient counts. The methodology page documents ingestion, normalization, and known limitations end-to-end. For context on the Sunshine Act itself and how the Open Payments dataset compares to alternative pharmaceutical-spending measures (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Open Payments Frequently Asked Questions, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's drug-approval registers, and academic literature on payment-prescribing correlations), the guides section walks through the relevant regulatory background.