Mercy Medical Center’s Nursing Excellence Again Honored with Prestigious Magnet® Recognition

February 23, 2026

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Mercy Medical Center President and CEO David Maine, MD, and members of the nursing staff celebrate the hospital's Magnet® with distinction recognition from the American Nurses Credentialing Center.

Mercy Medical Center nurses and executive staff have received word that the 150-year-old Catholic hospital had earned the coveted Magnet® recognition with distinction from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC). This is the fourth consecutive time Mercy has earned Magnet status (2011, 2016, 2021, 2026).

Mercy is one of only 75 hospitals in the United States to earn Magnet status with distinction, said Dr. David N. Maine, president and CEO, Mercy Health Services, Mercy Medical Center.

“Magnet status ‘with distinction’ is reserved for hospitals that exceed even the rigorous standards required for Magnet designation, essentially an honors category within the Magnet program,” Dr. Maine said. 

The elite status is indicated by validated empirical data and typically reserved for only a small fraction of Magnet organizations—often cited as fewer than 1%–8%, depending on the source/hospital population. 

“Institutions that achieve this level are considered the very top performers among all Magnet-designated hospitals, demonstrating exceptionally high performance in nursing excellence,” said Stacey Brull, Mercy vice president of patient care services and chief nursing officer.

Mercy first earned the Magnet credential in 2011, joining a select group of about 400 (of nearly 6,000) U.S. healthcare organizations. It re-earned the designation in 2016, 2021, and now in 2026.

“On behalf of the Sisters of Mercy, the board of trustees, and the senior leadership team, congratulations to Stacey Brull and the entire Mercy nursing division for being officially recognized as among the very best in the nation,” Dr. Maine added.

Magnet recognition has become the gold standard for nursing excellence and is taken into consideration when the public judges healthcare organizations. In fact, U.S. News & World Report’s annual showcase of “America’s Best Hospitals”—which has noted Mercy among the nation’s finest—includes Magnet recognition in its ranking criteria for quality of inpatient care. 

“There are 923 registered nurses serving patients in 32 units at Mercy, and every nurse is dedicated to delivering quality care in a compassionate setting. Earning Magnet status with distinction is further evidence of our staff’s commitment to our patients, their families, and to the communities they serve,” Brull said.

The process for achieving Magnet status includes a rigorous evaluation of nursing policies, practices, and procedures to ensure they are consistent with national benchmark standards. In addition, the process includes a three-day site visit from the ANCC, which took place earlier this year in January 2026. A team of Magnet surveyors met with patients, hospital staff, and community partners to assess the quality of nursing care delivered by Mercy nurses.  

Magnet recognition has been shown to provide specific benefits to hospitals and their communities, including:

  • Higher patient satisfaction with nurse communication, availability of help, and receipt of discharge information; 
  • Lower risk of 30-day mortality and lower failure to rescue;
  • Higher job satisfaction among nurses; and
  • Lower nurse reports of intentions to leave position.

“Since the hospital’s founding by the Sisters of Mercy more than 150 years ago, nursing excellence has remained at the heart of our mission. It is so very gratifying to see our nurses recognized for their skill, [sharing] the spirit of mercy with patients and their families every day,” said Sr. Helen Amos, RSM, executive chair, MHS Board of Trustees.

About Mercy

Founded in 1874 in Downtown Baltimore by the Sisters of Mercy, Mercy Medical Center is a 183-licensed bed, acute care, university-affiliated teaching hospital. Mercy has been recognized as a high-performing Maryland hospital (U.S. News & World Report); has achieved an overall 5-Star quality, safety, and patient experience rating (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services); is A-rated for Hospital Safety (Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade); and is certified by the American Nurses Credentialing Center as a Magnet™ hospital. Mercy Health Services is a not-for-profit health system and the parent company of Mercy Medical Center and Mercy Personal Physicians.

Media Contact 
Dan Collins, Senior Director of Media Relations
Office: 410-332-9714
Cell: 410-375-7342
Email: dcollins@mdmercy.com

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