New York recorded 9 NPI deactivations for nurses during the week of July 6-12, 2026. This figure represents 18% of the national total for nurse NPI deactivations in that period. All 9 deactivations were for individual providers, with no organizational NPIs affected in the state.
Credential Breakdown
The deactivated NPIs spanned several nursing specialties across New York. Licensed Practical Nurses accounted for the largest share, with 3 individuals, making up 33% of the total deactivations for the week. Registered Nurses followed with 2 deactivations, representing 22% of the week's total. Other specialties, including Adult Health Nurse Practitioner, Nurse Practitioner, and Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse, each saw 1 deactivation, contributing 11% to the total.
Geographic Distribution
Geographically, the deactivations were distributed across various locations within New York, indicating a broad spread rather than a localized trend. Cities such as Hudson Falls, Moravia, Harrison, Bronx, and Rochester each saw 1 deactivation. This dispersed pattern suggests that the administrative NPI status changes for this reporting period were not concentrated in any single metropolitan or rural area of the state.
NPI deactivations are administrative updates in the federal registry and do not inherently indicate a provider has ceased practice or faced license action.
