Pediatric care across Ohio
Pediatric medicine in Ohio is delivered through a layered network of dedicated children's hospitals, family-and-pediatric care centers inside larger acute-care facilities, and birthing-friendly hospitals that anchor maternity and newborn services in their communities. ClinicMapper currently tracks 70 facilities across 49 cities in the state, drawn directly from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Care Compare public dataset. 8 of those facilities are flagged by CMS as dedicated children's hospitals — the freestanding or hospital-within-hospital programs that typically concentrate the deepest subspecialty expertise updated pediatric travel-stay notes in Ohio.
If you are choosing care for a complex condition — a congenital heart defect, a suspected oncologic diagnosis, a neurodevelopmental concern, or a high-risk pregnancy — start with the dedicated pediatric hospitals listed in the "Top referral centers" panel below. For routine care, well-child visits, urgent care, and uncomplicated emergencies, the closer family-and-pediatric centers will usually serve you well and save your family the travel. The full city-by-city breakdown lower on this page lets you see what is within reasonable driving distance of where you live and work, and which referral centers are worth the longer trip when the diagnosis warrants it.
Specialty depth in Ohio
Of the facilities listed in Ohio, 70 indicate Level III or IV neonatal intensive care capacity, 8 are flagged with pediatric oncology service lines, and 8 appear in our pediatric cardiology directory. These figures undercount in some categories — particularly subspecialties offered through visiting-physician arrangements at smaller hospitals — and they overcount in others, since CMS does not publish a clean specialty taxonomy for every facility. We document the conservative method we use in the methodology section; a recent NICU parent network summary we err on the side of listing a facility under a specialty when the public data supports it, then leave the final verification to the family making a referral call.
- General Pediatrics — 70 Ohio facilities tagged
- Neonatal Intensive Care (NICU) — 70 Ohio facilities tagged
- Pediatric Emergency Medicine — 64 Ohio facilities tagged
- Maternal-Fetal Medicine — 62 Ohio facilities tagged
- Pediatric Orthopedics — 36 Ohio facilities tagged
- Pediatric Pulmonology — 36 Ohio facilities tagged
- Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine — 36 Ohio facilities tagged
- Pediatric Cardiology & Cardiac Surgery — 8 Ohio facilities tagged
How families choose a facility
The CMS overall star rating shown on each card is the federal government's summary measure of hospital quality across mortality, safety, readmissions, patient experience, and timely & effective care. It is a useful first signal but it is calculated for the hospital as a whole rather than for the pediatric service line specifically — so a four-star community hospital can be the right answer for a routine admission and the wrong answer for a complex congenital heart procedure, while a three-star academic center can be exactly the right answer when subspecialty depth is the deciding factor. Combine the rating with the questions we suggest in the methodology page: case volume for your child's specific condition, the multidisciplinary team's composition, and the availability of a pediatric ICU on site.
For families traveling within Ohio — or in from a neighboring state — most of the dedicated children's hospitals in the lists below operate Ronald McDonald-style family housing, patient-navigator services, and dedicated financial counseling for out-of-network and Medicaid families. None of that information is in federal datasets, but every children's hospital we have ever called has someone whose job is to answer those questions; ask for the family services coordinator when you call.
Each city section is sized by facility count. Tap any facility for a full profile.
Cincinnati · 6 facilities
View city →Cleveland · 6 facilities
View city →Columbus · 6 facilities
View city →Dayton · 3 facilities
View city →Toledo · 3 facilities
View city →Akron · 2 facilities
View city →Lima · 2 facilities
View city →Chillicothe · 1 facility
View city →Franklin · 1 facility
View city →Canton · 1 facility
View city →Ontario · 1 facility
View city →Oregon · 1 facility
View city →Bellevue · 1 facility
View city →Findlay · 1 facility
View city →Bryan · 1 facility
View city →Dublin · 1 facility
View city →Sandusky · 1 facility
View city →Norwalk · 1 facility
View city →Hamilton · 1 facility
View city →Zanesville · 1 facility
View city →Delaware · 1 facility
View city →Saint Marys · 1 facility
View city →Mayfield Heights · 1 facility
View city →Boardman · 1 facility
View city →Gallipolis · 1 facility
View city →Kettering · 1 facility
View city →Mount Vernon · 1 facility
View city →Marietta · 1 facility
View city →Marion · 1 facility
View city →Bellefontaine · 1 facility
View city →Oxford · 1 facility
View city →Marysville · 1 facility
View city →Fremont · 1 facility
View city →Coldwater · 1 facility
View city →Fairfield · 1 facility
View city →Tiffin · 1 facility
View city →Westerville · 1 facility
View city →Athens · 1 facility
View city →Beaver Creek · 1 facility
View city →Cambridge · 1 facility
View city →Portsmouth · 1 facility
View city →Middleburg Heights · 1 facility
View city →Springfield · 1 facility
View city →Chardon · 1 facility
View city →Dover · 1 facility
View city →West Chester · 1 facility
View city →Sidney · 1 facility
View city →Bowling Green · 1 facility
View city →Wooster · 1 facility
View city →For caregivers and parents new to navigating pediatric specialty referrals.
Background reading we keep on hand when researching new programs.
A peer-curated reading list, updated as we vet new sources.
Companion guides to the federal datasets that anchor this site.