New York recorded 13 physician NPI deactivations during the week of June 8-14, 2026. This figure represents 8% of the national total for physician NPI deactivations in the period. The vast majority of these deactivations, 12 in total, were for individual providers, with only 1 deactivation attributed to an organization. This distribution highlights changes primarily among individual practitioners.

Specialty and Geographic Distribution

Internal Medicine accounted for the largest share of deactivations, with 4 providers, making up 31% of the state's total. Psychiatry followed with 2 deactivations, representing 15%. Other specialties, including Neuromuscular Medicine (Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation), Therapeutic Radiology, and Family Medicine, each saw 1 NPI deactivation during the week. Geographically, the city of NEW YORK registered 2 deactivations. Cities such as TARRYTOWN, KENMORE, STONY BROOK, and WOODHAVEN each recorded 1 deactivation. This spread across various medical fields and multiple urban and suburban areas suggests deactivations were not concentrated in a single specialty or metropolitan hub.

NPI deactivations are administrative status changes within the federal NPPES registry and do not inherently indicate that a provider has ceased practicing or faced a license action. Hipa.ai retains a name cache from public CMS files captured before deactivation for historical reference.