Texas recorded 5 NPI deactivations for nurses during the week of June 1 to June 7, 2026. This total represents 7% of the national figure for nurse NPI deactivations in the same period. All 5 individual providers were affected, with no organizational NPIs deactivated this week.
Credential and City Overview
A breakdown of the deactivated NPIs by taxonomy shows that 3 Family Nurse Practitioners accounted for 60% of the total. 2 Registered Nurses comprised the remaining 40% of the deactivations. The geographic data indicates that the deactivated NPIs were distributed across 5 distinct cities: Houston, Port Arthur, Dallas, Frisco, and El Paso. Each of these cities recorded one deactivation, suggesting no single concentrated area for these administrative changes within Texas.
Understanding NPI Deactivations
An NPI deactivation is an administrative status change within the federal NPPES registry. This status change does not, by itself, indicate a license action or that a provider has ceased practicing. Hipa.ai retains a name cache from public CMS files captured before deactivation, providing historical context for these records.
