New York recorded 10 NPI deactivations for nurses this week, representing 16% of the national total. All 10 deactivations were associated with individual providers, with no organizational NPIs affected during the period of June 8-14, 2026.

Deactivation Trends by Specialty

Among the deactivated NPIs, Licensed Practical Nurses constituted the largest group, with 4 records, accounting for 40% of the total. Registered Nurses followed with 3 deactivations, making up 30%. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists, Home Health Registered Nurses, and Psychiatric/Mental Health Nurse Practitioners each contributed 1 deactivation, or 10%. This distribution covers a diverse set of nursing specialties across the state.

Geographic Spread and Context

The NPI deactivations were observed across various locations within New York, rather than being concentrated in a single metropolitan area. ALBANY, GROTON, CHEEKTOWAGA, RICHMOND HILL, and BABYLON each recorded 1 deactivation. Other cities such as Stony Brook, Staten Island, Orangeburg, Geneva, and Long Island City also saw one deactivation each. This widespread distribution indicates that these administrative updates are not localized to a particular region or healthcare market within the state. It is important to note that NPI deactivations are administrative status changes in the federal NPPES registry and do not by themselves indicate a license action or that a provider has stopped practicing.