For the week spanning April 27 to May 3, 2026, New York's NPI registry saw 9 deactivations for Nurses, accounting for 16% of the national total in this healthcare category. All 9 of these deactivations were associated with individual providers, indicating no organizational NPIs for nurses were deactivated in the state during this specific reporting period. This data provides a snapshot of administrative changes within the nursing workforce in New York.
Deactivation Trends by Credential and Location
An analysis of the deactivated NPIs reveals the distribution across various nursing credentials. Registered Nurses represented the largest share, with 3 of the 9 deactivations, or 33% of the total. Adult Health Nurse Practitioners and Licensed Practical Nurses each accounted for 2 deactivations, making up 22% each of the weekly total. Additionally, one Family Nurse Practitioner and one School Registered Nurse NPI were deactivated, each contributing 11%. Geographically, the deactivations were dispersed across New York, with no single city exhibiting a notable concentration. Elmhurst, New Rochelle, Central Islip, Massapequa, and Cheektowaga each recorded one deactivation.
NPI deactivations reflect an administrative status change in the federal NPPES registry and do not inherently indicate a license action or that a provider has ceased practicing. Hipa.ai retains a name cache from public CMS files captured before deactivation for these records.
