Allegheny County, PA  ·  Daily Brief

Allegheny County PA Medicare Daily Brief: Dental Coverage Gaps, 10 Hospital Ratings, and the Plan Landscape Every Senior on Fixed Income Needs to See Right Now — April 12, 2026

By Sarah Chen-Watkins, Managing Editor — National + Investigative + Daily Brief  ·  Washington, D.C.  ·  April 12, 2026  ·  Sources: CMS Medicare Plan Finder (medicare.gov), CDC PLACES 2022, CMS Hospital Compare, HRSA, PA APPRISE SHIP

⚡ TL;DR — The 3 Numbers That Should Stop You Scrolling
⚠ OEP Countdown: The Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period ends March 31, 2026 — meaning if you haven't already acted, your next standard window to switch plans is the Annual Enrollment Period (AEP), October 15 – December 7, 2026, effective January 1, 2027. Use the next six months to research. Don't wait until week one of October.

What Is the Full Medicare Plan Landscape in Allegheny County, PA Right Now?

Let's start with what carriers and their marketing materials will never just hand you: the full picture. Allegheny County, Pennsylvania — home to Pittsburgh and 1,224,825 residents — is one of the more competitive Medicare Advantage markets in the mid-Atlantic region. Multiple carriers offer plans across the county for 2026, spanning HMO, PPO, and Special Needs Plan (SNP) structures.

To see every plan available at your specific zip code — not just the ones a carrier's agent feels like mentioning — go directly to medicare.gov/plan-compare or call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), TTY: 1-877-486-2048, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. That is your legal right. Use it.

What matters more than any individual plan name is understanding the framework those plans exist within — the hospitals they contract with, the health needs of your community, and the benefit gaps that no carrier is going to highlight in their mailer. That is what this brief is for.

1.22M
Allegheny County total population (CDC PLACES 2022)
10
Medicare-certified acute care hospitals in the county (CMS Hospital Compare)
11.8%
Seniors 65+ with total tooth loss — a Medicare dental coverage blind spot (CDC PLACES 2022)
37%
Adults with short sleep duration — a chronic disease risk multiplier (CDC PLACES 2022)
Allegheny County, PA — CMS Hospital Overall Star Ratings (2024, CMS Hospital Compare)
5★ 4★ 3★ 2★ 1★ 3★ UPMC McKeesport 3★ UPMC Mercy 4★ Allegheny Valley 4★ Heritage Valley Sew. 2★ Allegheny General 3★ West Penn Hospital 3★ UPMC St Margaret 4★ UPMC Passavant 3★ Magee Womens 3★ VA Pittsburgh (Veterans) 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars VA (3 Stars)
Source: CMS Hospital Compare Overall Star Ratings, accessed April 2026. Ratings reflect most recently published CMS data. Ratings change periodically.

Which Hospitals in Allegheny County Accept Medicare — And Are They Any Good?

All 10 acute care hospitals in Allegheny County are Medicare-certified. But "accepts Medicare" is the floor, not the ceiling. Here is the complete picture, ranked by CMS overall star rating:

Hospital Address Phone CMS Rating ER? Type
Allegheny Valley Hospital 1301 Carlisle St, Natrona, PA 15065 (412) 224-5100 4 Stars ★★★★ Yes Acute Care
Heritage Valley Sewickley 720 Blackburn Rd, Sewickley, PA 15143 (412) 741-6600 4 Stars ★★★★ Yes Acute Care
UPMC Passavant 9100 Babcock Blvd, Pittsburgh, PA 15237 (412) 367-6700 4 Stars ★★★★ Yes Acute Care
UPMC McKeesport Hospital 1500 Fifth Ave, McKeesport, PA 15132 (412) 664-2000 3 Stars ★★★ Yes Acute Care
UPMC Mercy 1400 Locust St, Pittsburgh, PA 15219 (412) 232-8111 3 Stars ★★★ Yes Acute Care
West Penn Hospital 4800 Friendship Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15224 (412) 578-5000 3 Stars ★★★ Yes Acute Care
UPMC St Margaret 815 Freeport Rd, Pittsburgh, PA 15215 (412) 784-4000 3 Stars ★★★ Yes Acute Care
Magee Womens Hosp. of UPMC 300 Halket St, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 (412) 641-4010 3 Stars ★★★ Yes Acute Care
VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System University Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15240 (412) 688-6100 3 Stars ★★★ Yes VA — Veterans Only
Allegheny General Hospital 320 East North Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15212 (412) 359-3131 2 Stars ★★ Yes Acute Care

Why does a hospital's CMS star rating matter for your Medicare plan? Because if you're enrolled in a Medicare Advantage HMO, you can generally only use in-network hospitals without paying significantly more — or anything at all for emergencies. If your plan's network routes you to a 2-star facility when a 4-star option is two miles farther, that's worth knowing before you sign any enrollment form.

One number that deserves a moment of your full attention: Allegheny General Hospital, one of Pittsburgh's most prominent addresses and a Level I Trauma Center, carries a 2-star CMS overall rating. That rating reflects patient experience surveys, readmission rates, mortality rates, and safety measures — not just whether the lobby has nice chairs. (The lobby has nothing to do with it, for what it's worth.)

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Does Medicare Cover Dental Care? And Why Is 11.8% of Allegheny County a Warning Sign?

Here is the sentence Medicare's own enrollment guide buries on page 47: Traditional Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover routine dental care, cleanings, fillings, extractions, or dentures. Full stop. You can be a beneficiary for 20 years and Medicare will pay exactly zero dollars toward keeping your teeth.

Now look at the local data. According to CDC PLACES 2022, 11.8% of Allegheny County adults aged 65 and older have lost all their teeth (edentulism). The confidence interval runs from 9.6% to 14.3%, so the true number could be considerably higher. And separately, only about 65% of Allegheny County adults visited a dentist or dental clinic in the past year — meaning roughly 1 in 3 adults skipped dental care entirely.

On a fixed income, that math is brutally simple: when you can't afford dental care and Medicare won't pay for it, you skip it. You skip it until a tooth infection becomes a hospitalization. And that hospitalization? Medicare Part A covers it — after your $1,632 inpatient deductible (2026). The system is paying for the expensive end of a problem it refused to prevent at the cheap end.

Some Medicare Advantage plans in Allegheny County do offer dental benefits — typically limited annual allowances for preventive and sometimes restorative care. The crucial questions to ask any plan carrier: What is the annual dental maximum? Does it cover dentures? Does it require an in-network dentist? Is the dentist I currently see in your network? Get those answers in writing, not from a TV ad.

Allegheny County, PA — Key Health Metrics for Seniors (CDC PLACES 2022)
Mammography Use (women 50–74) Colorectal Cancer Screening (45–75) Annual Dental Visit (adults) Short Sleep Duration (adults) Total Tooth Loss (65+ yrs) 79.5% 68.1% 65.0% 37.0% 11.8% 0% 50% 100%
Source: CDC PLACES Local Data for Better Health, 2022 release. County-level estimates for Allegheny County, PA (FIPS: 42003).

What Do Cancer Screening Rates in Allegheny Tell Us About Who's Falling Through the Cracks?

Prevention numbers are proxy numbers. They tell you who is engaged with the healthcare system and who isn't — and more bluntly, who can afford to be.

CDC PLACES 2022 data