ADHS inspects, certifies and licenses medical health care institutions and providers of medical services, child care centers, business hearing dispensers, and DUI and domestic violence treatment centers. Each month, an extract from the ADHS Division of Licensing SQL view is geocoded using ADHS's internal geocoder, and post-processed using a Python script to create feature classes by facility type. Tabular data is maintained by each respective bureau in the licensing division, while the GIS Team extracts the data and creates GIS layers and shares them publicly. ADHS Division of Licensing Mission Statement: To protect the health and safety of Arizonans by providing information, establishing standards, and licensing and regulating health and child care services. Last updated: February 2025Update Frequency: MonthlyData FAQs:Some records have “license_expiration” earlier than the “rundate” while the “OPERTION_STATUS” is “ACTIVE”, should we treat all records with “OPERATION_STATUS” of “ACTIVE” as open at the time the data is released? Answer: Yes - ACTIVE is all the current licenses. In 2019 there was a perpetual rule change that affected certain facilities so in lieu of an expiration date, we began tracking the annual fee due date in the "license_expiration" field. Per rule, these facilities can submit annual requirements up to 30 days after the fee due date (aka license expiration in the provider database) so we do expect some to be earlier than the run date. Is the FACID of the same facility maintained unique and same throughout all releases? If a facility is purchased by a different company or has it’s name changed, is the FACID changed? Answer: The FACID represents a licensed premise - in many cases the facility ID is maintained when purchased by a different owner but under federal rule, certain facilities may choose to have a new CMS certification number which would require a new FACID be issued for that premise. What’s the unit type of capacities for different categories? Answer: This varies - it can be child capacity, bed count, dialysis station, etc. For Group_Home_for_Individuals_with_a_Developmental_Disability and Residential_Facility, how to tell if the employer’s office is at the facility VS the employer’s office is somewhere else and employees are sent to those facilities? Also is there a way to tell if a facility only has part time workers (Like workers only need to be at the residential facility less than 8hr per day or less than 5 days a week )? Answer: This is not currently available on the public databaseThe data contains a 'COUNTY' field and a "N_County' field - which one should I use to filter results? Answer: N_County - this is the county that's assigned when a record is geocoded using the physical street address, vs one that is assigned manually during the licensing process.
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To operate an ambulance service and ambulances in Arizona, an application must be filed with the Department of Health Services, Bureau of Emergency Medical Services & Trauma System, and a Certificate of Necessity (CON) granted by the Director. This dataset contains a representation of the CON service boundaries. While this dataset is complete for Arizona, there are known issues with intra & inter-polygon topology (gaps/slivers) and alignment with features used to create the CON boundaries. Please refer to the service area boundary described in the CON certificate, which can be found on this website. The data was last updated January 2024. For more information visit AZ the Dept. of Health Services Ground Ambulance Program Certificate of Necessity (CON) Holders.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This item has been archived. It is no longer being updated.For current COVID-19 cases data updates, please see the COVID-19 Cases Per 100,000 by Zip Code dashboard, which shows the COVID-19 case rate per 100,000 population by week for each zip code and is supported by the weekly release of data from the Maricopa County Department of Public Health (MCDPH) https://data.tempe.gov/datasets/covid-19-case-indicators/explore.--------As of 3/2/2022 the Arizona Department of Health Services has shifted to a weekly update schedule. We've adjusted our process to update every Wednesday afternoon.This table provides a weekly log of confirmed COVID-19 cases by Zip Code. Data are provided by the Arizona Department of Health Services (ADHS). Data Source: Arizona Department of Health Services (AZDHS) daily COVID-19 report by zip code (https://adhsgis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/84b7f701060641ca8bd9ea0717790906). Daily Change is calculated by taking the current day’s case value for a given Postal Code and subtracting the prior day’s value. This resulting value is the Daily Change. Based on reporting from ADHS Daily Change may be a positive or negative number or 0 if no change has been reported. Moving Average is calculated by summing the current day’s case count with the prior 6 days’ cases for a given Postal Code and dividing by 7.Arizona Department of Health Services (AZDHS) data are scheduled for daily updates at 9:00 AM (COVID-19 cases) and 12:00 PM (COVID-19 vaccinations), but the times when the AZDHS releases that days COVID-19 cases and vaccinations may vary. City of Tempe data are updated each afternoon at 3:00 PM to allow for possible AZDHS delays. When there are AZDHS delays in updating the daily data, dashboard data updates may be delayed by 24 hours. The charts and daily values list can be used to confirm the date of the most recent counts on the COVID-19 cases and vaccinations dashboards. If data are not released by the time of the scheduled daily dashboard refresh, that day's values may appear on the dashboard as an addition to the next day's value.Additional InformationSource: Arizona Department of Health Services (AZDHS) daily COVID-19 report by zip code (https://adhsgis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/84b7f701060641ca8bd9ea0717790906)Contact (author): n/aContact E-Mail (author): n/aContact (maintainer): City of Tempe Open Data TeamContact E-Mail (maintainer): data@tempe.govData Source Type: TablePreparation Method: Data are exposed via ArcGIS Server and its REST API.Publish Frequency: DailyPublish Method: Data are downloaded each afternoon once ADHS updates its public API. Data are transformed and appended to a table in Tempe’s Enterprise GIS.Data Dictionary
This dataset contains Community Statistical Areas (CSAs) boundaries created by the Arizona Department of Health Services to represent Arizona communities while maintaining population numbers sufficient for statistical analysis. Using census tracts as the base geography, CSAs are updated every Census using a repeatable rule based methodology intended to preserve community boundaries, provide population numbers conducive to statistical analysis, and account for demographic variation.Summary:139 Community Statistical Areas56 in metro Phoenix area20 in metro Tucson areaPopulations of 10,000-200,000 (except tribal areas)Areas no greater than 7,500 square miles (except tribal areas)Reflect existing communities, including cities, towns, municipal planning areas (i.e. City of Phoenix Villages), and Tribal lands (reservations) A crosswalk between Census 2020 Tracts and CSAs is available here.Update Frequency: Every 10 Years (Decennial census)
This composite file contains elementary, secondary, and unified school district boundaries from the 2021-2022 academic year collected for the National Center for Education Statistics by the U.S. Census Bureau and reported in TIGER/Line 2022. ADHS downloads the composite file, and restructures it to support spatial joins to point data, especially for elementary and secondary schools districts, which frequently overlap. Source DataThe National Center for Education Statistics’ (NCES) Education Demographic and Geographic Estimate (EDGE) program develops annually updated school district boundary composite files that include public elementary, secondary, and unified school district boundaries clipped to the U.S. shoreline. School districts are special-purpose governments and administrative units designed by state and local officials to organize and provide public education for local residents. District boundaries are collected for NCES by the U.S. Census Bureau to support educational research and program administration, and the boundaries are essential for constructing district-level estimates of the number of children in poverty. The Census Bureau’s School District Boundary Review program (SDRP) (https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/sdrp.html) obtains the boundaries, names, and grade ranges from state officials, and integrates these updates into Census TIGER. Census TIGER boundaries include legal maritime buffers for coastal areas by default, but the NCES composite file removes these buffers to facilitate broader use and cleaner cartographic representation. The inputs for this data layer were developed from Census TIGER/Line 2020 and represent boundaries reported for the 2019-2020 school year. For more information about NCES school district boundary data, see: https://nces.ed.gov/programs/edge/Geographic/DistrictBoundaries.Last Updated: June 2023Update Frequency: As Needed
A Certificate of Necessity (“CON”) is required to operate a ground ambulance and transport patients in Arizona. The Arizona Department of Health Services (“ADHS”) regulates the operating and response times of ambulance services to meet the needs of the public and ensure adequate service, pursuant to Arizona Revised Statute (“A.R.S.”) § 36-2232. Under A.R.S. § 36-2232(A)(3), response times shall follow uniform standard definitions for urban, suburban, rural, and wilderness geographic areas within a CON. Under Arizona Administrative Code (“A.A.C.”) R9-25-901, “Scene locality” is defined as an urban, suburban, rural, or wilderness area. Scene locality is sometimes also referred to as “urbanicity”. The current scene locality / urbanicity maps were developed based on the 2020 Census urban areas and block groups, to geographically represent areas within a CON defined under A.A.C. R9-25-901 as the following:“Urban area” means a geographic region delineated as an urbanized area by the United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. “Suburban area” means a geographic region within a 10-mile radius of an urban area that has a population density equal to or greater than 1,000 residents per square mile.“Rural area” means a geographic region with a population of less than 40,000 residents that is not a suburban area. “Wilderness area” means a geographic region that has a population density of less than one resident per square mile.Additional Information:The 2010 definition for urbanized areas is applied, as the 2020 Census doesn't delineate urban into two categories.Updates occur as needed based on the most recent decennial census, adhering to Administrative Statute and Code.Regulatory authority and definitions for scene localities can be found in the Statute and Rule Book, under A.R.S. § 36-2232 and A.A.C. R9-25-901.For more information about the Certificates of Necessity program, please visit the ADHS Ground Ambulance Program website or call (602) 364-3150.Last Updated: Update Frequency: As Needed; requires Administrative Code change
Zip codes identified by the Arizona Department of Health Services to promote ownership of marijuana establishments in communities disproportionately affected by the enforcement of Arizona’s previous marijuana laws under Prop 207 (passed by Arizona voters in Nov. 2020).In December 2021, the Arizona Department of Health Services will issue 26 adult-use Marijuana Establishment licenses to applicants who qualify under the social equity ownership program. More information about the State of Arizona's Medical Marijuana Social Equity Ownership Program can be found here: https://azdhs.gov/licensing/marijuana/social-equity/index.php To see if you quality go to the map on this page: https://www.azdhs.gov/licensing/marijuana/social-equity/index.php#qualification The source data for this data layer was the Census 2020 Zip Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs). Zip codes for the Medical Marijuana Social Equity Ownership Program were selected by the Arizona Department of Health Services, which were then identified in the ZCTA 2020 GIS layer.
ATSDR’s Geospatial Research, Analysis & Services Program (GRASP) created the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Social Vulnerability Index (CDC SVI or simply SVI) to help public health officials and emergency response planners identify and map the communities that will most likely need support before, during, and after a hazardous event. The SVI is derived from American Community Survey (ACS), 5-year data. The CDC releases updated SVI data every two years. The Arizona Department of Health Services (ADHS) calculates yearly SVI updates in between CDC release years using an R script to reproduce CDC's SVI calculations and newly released ACS 5-year data.All methods and background information for SVI can be found at: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/placeandhealth/svi/documentation/SVI_documentation_2018.htmlAs the R script is merely a reproduction of the CDC's calculations, any questions about the CDC's SVI methodology should be directed to svi_coordinator@cdc.govIf you find any discrepancies between the CDC's 2018 SVI values and the 2018 values generated from this R Script, please email gis@azdhs.gov.Please note that the SVI data set generated from this R script does not include 2 variables that are present in the CDC's data set. Those are AREA_SQMI (Tract area in square miles) and E_DAYPOP (Adjunct variable - Estimated daytime population, LandScan 2018). These variables do not affect the SVI calculations but may be useful for mapping the data.LAST UPDATED: October 2021UPDATE FREQUENCY: None planned
This data set contains all active National Health Service (NHSC) primary care sites in Arizona.The NHSC builds healthy communities by supporting qualified health care providers dedicated to working in areas of the United States with limited access to care. The NHSC supports more than 20,000 primary care medical, dental, and behavioral health providers through scholarships and loan repayment programs. They require health care workers to service in high-need areas called "Health Professional Shortage Areas". These sites are to be used for the sliding fee schedule clinics application.Data was provided by HRSA NHSC Health Workforce Connector. Last Updated: August 2023Update Frequency: Annual
This data set contains all active National Health Service (NHSC) behavioral health sites in Arizona.The NHSC builds healthy communities by supporting qualified health care providers dedicated to working in areas of the United States with limited access to care. The NHSC supports more than 20,000 primary care medical, dental, and behavioral health providers through scholarships and loan repayment programs. They require health care workers to service in high-need areas called "Health Professional Shortage Areas". These sites are to be used for the sliding fee schedule clinics application.Data was provided by HRSA NHSC Health Workforce Connector. Last Updated: August 2023Update Frequency: Annual
ATSDR’s Geospatial Research, Analysis & Services Program (GRASP) created the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Social Vulnerability Index (CDC SVI or simply SVI) to help public health officials and emergency response planners identify and map the communities that will most likely need support before, during, and after a hazardous event. The SVI is derived from American Community Survey (ACS), 5-year data. The CDC releases updated SVI data every two years. The Arizona Department of Health Services (ADHS) calculates yearly SVI updates in between CDC release years using an R script to reproduce CDC's SVI calculations and newly released ACS 5-year data.All methods and background information for SVI can be found at: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/placeandhealth/svi/documentation/SVI_documentation_2018.htmlAs the R script is merely a reproduction of the CDC's calculations, any questions about the CDC's SVI methodology should be directed to svi_coordinator@cdc.govIf you find any discrepancies between the CDC's 2018 SVI values and the 2018 values generated from this R Script, please email gis@azdhs.gov.Please note that the SVI data set generated from this R script does not include 2 variables that are present in the CDC's data set. Those are AREA_SQMI (Tract area in square miles) and E_DAYPOP (Adjunct variable - Estimated daytime population, LandScan 2018). These variables do not affect the SVI calculations but may be useful for mapping the data.LAST UPDATED: October 2021UPDATE FREQUENCY: None planned
This dataset presents the 2020 CDC SVI by Census Tracts boundaries in Arizona. Data was provided by CDC Geospatial Research, Analysis, and Services Program (GRASP).The CDC\ATSDR Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) is a tool, created by the Geospatial Research, Analysis and Services Program (GRASP), to help public health officials and emergency response planners identify and map the communities that will most likely need support before, during, and after a hazardous event. The tract-level SVI shows the relative vulnerability of the population of every U.S. Census tract. The county-level SVI shows the relative vulnerability of every U.S. county population. The SVI ranks tracts (or counties) on 16 social factors, described in detail in the documentation. The tract (or county) rankings for individual factors are further grouped into four related themes. Thus each enumeration unit receives a ranking for each Census variable and for each of the four themes, as well as an overall ranking.See complete documentation here: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/placeandhealth/svi/data_documentation_download.html. For additional questions, contact the SVI Lead at svi_coordinator@cdc.gov. Last Updated: 2020Update Frequency: Annually
The Arizona Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) provides nutrition education and breastfeeding support services, supplemental nutritious foods and referrals to health and social services. WIC serves pregnant, breastfeeding, and postpartum women; infants; and children under the age of five who are determined to be at nutritional risk. Arizona's WIC Program is funded by the United States Department of Agriculture.WIC clinic staff help eligible families provide healthy foods for their children, as well as referrals to other community resources.WIC locations provided by the ADHS Bureau of Nutrition and Physical Activity in April 2022.Update Frequency: Annual
ADHS inspects, certifies and licenses medical health care institutions and providers of medical services, child care centers, business hearing dispensers, and DUI and domestic violence treatment centers. Each month, an extract from the ADHS Division of Licensing SQL view is geocoded using ADHS's internal geocoder, and post-processed using a Python script to create feature classes by facility type. Tabular data is maintained by each respective bureau in the licensing division, while the GIS Team extracts the data and creates GIS layers and shares them publicly. ADHS Division of Licensing Mission Statement: To protect the health and safety of Arizonans by providing information, establishing standards, and licensing and regulating health and child care services. Last updated: February 2025Update Frequency: MonthlyData FAQs:Some records have “license_expiration” earlier than the “rundate” while the “OPERTION_STATUS” is “ACTIVE”, should we treat all records with “OPERATION_STATUS” of “ACTIVE” as open at the time the data is released? Answer: Yes - ACTIVE is all the current licenses. In 2019 there was a perpetual rule change that affected certain facilities so in lieu of an expiration date, we began tracking the annual fee due date in the "license_expiration" field. Per rule, these facilities can submit annual requirements up to 30 days after the fee due date (aka license expiration in the provider database) so we do expect some to be earlier than the run date. Is the FACID of the same facility maintained unique and same throughout all releases? If a facility is purchased by a different company or has it’s name changed, is the FACID changed? Answer: The FACID represents a licensed premise - in many cases the facility ID is maintained when purchased by a different owner but under federal rule, certain facilities may choose to have a new CMS certification number which would require a new FACID be issued for that premise. What’s the unit type of capacities for different categories? Answer: This varies - it can be child capacity, bed count, dialysis station, etc. For Group_Home_for_Individuals_with_a_Developmental_Disability and Residential_Facility, how to tell if the employer’s office is at the facility VS the employer’s office is somewhere else and employees are sent to those facilities? Also is there a way to tell if a facility only has part time workers (Like workers only need to be at the residential facility less than 8hr per day or less than 5 days a week )? Answer: This is not currently available on the public databaseThe data contains a 'COUNTY' field and a "N_County' field - which one should I use to filter results? Answer: N_County - this is the county that's assigned when a record is geocoded using the physical street address, vs one that is assigned manually during the licensing process.
Prescription drug collection sites safely and securely gather and dispose of your unused or expired medicines, including controlled substances. Authorized collection sites include retail, hospital, or clinic pharmacies; and/or law enforcement facilities. These collection sites may offer on-site medicine drop-off boxes, mail back programs or other in-home disposal methods to assist you in safely disposing of your unused or expired medicines.Prescription drug drop-off locations were provided by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and AZ Crime Prevention. ADHS geocoded the data and added phone numbers.Update Frequency: Annual
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ADHS inspects, certifies and licenses medical health care institutions and providers of medical services, child care centers, business hearing dispensers, and DUI and domestic violence treatment centers. Each month, an extract from the ADHS Division of Licensing SQL view is geocoded using ADHS's internal geocoder, and post-processed using a Python script to create feature classes by facility type. Tabular data is maintained by each respective bureau in the licensing division, while the GIS Team extracts the data and creates GIS layers and shares them publicly. ADHS Division of Licensing Mission Statement: To protect the health and safety of Arizonans by providing information, establishing standards, and licensing and regulating health and child care services. Last updated: February 2025Update Frequency: MonthlyData FAQs:Some records have “license_expiration” earlier than the “rundate” while the “OPERTION_STATUS” is “ACTIVE”, should we treat all records with “OPERATION_STATUS” of “ACTIVE” as open at the time the data is released? Answer: Yes - ACTIVE is all the current licenses. In 2019 there was a perpetual rule change that affected certain facilities so in lieu of an expiration date, we began tracking the annual fee due date in the "license_expiration" field. Per rule, these facilities can submit annual requirements up to 30 days after the fee due date (aka license expiration in the provider database) so we do expect some to be earlier than the run date. Is the FACID of the same facility maintained unique and same throughout all releases? If a facility is purchased by a different company or has it’s name changed, is the FACID changed? Answer: The FACID represents a licensed premise - in many cases the facility ID is maintained when purchased by a different owner but under federal rule, certain facilities may choose to have a new CMS certification number which would require a new FACID be issued for that premise. What’s the unit type of capacities for different categories? Answer: This varies - it can be child capacity, bed count, dialysis station, etc. For Group_Home_for_Individuals_with_a_Developmental_Disability and Residential_Facility, how to tell if the employer’s office is at the facility VS the employer’s office is somewhere else and employees are sent to those facilities? Also is there a way to tell if a facility only has part time workers (Like workers only need to be at the residential facility less than 8hr per day or less than 5 days a week )? Answer: This is not currently available on the public databaseThe data contains a 'COUNTY' field and a "N_County' field - which one should I use to filter results? Answer: N_County - this is the county that's assigned when a record is geocoded using the physical street address, vs one that is assigned manually during the licensing process.