46 datasets found
  1. HHS IDs

    • healthdata.gov
    • datasets.ai
    • +1more
    Updated May 3, 2024
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    (2024). HHS IDs [Dataset]. https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/HHS-IDs/vz64-k9wr
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    xml, csv, application/rdfxml, application/rssxml, tsv, kmz, kml, application/geo+jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 3, 2024
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    After May 3, 2024, this dataset and webpage will no longer be updated because hospitals are no longer required to report data on COVID-19 hospital admissions, and hospital capacity and occupancy data, to HHS through CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network. Data voluntarily reported to NHSN after May 1, 2024, will be available starting May 10, 2024, at COVID Data Tracker Hospitalizations.

    This file helps define the HHS_ID column that is published in both the

    'COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility' found here: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/anag-cw7u

    COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and 'Hospital Capacity by Facility -- RAW' found here: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/uqq2-txqb

    As a part of an effort to improve the granularity of spatial data, unique identifiers (named “HHS IDs” in the datasets) have been assigned to each individual facility. These unique identifiers are provided so data users can reference each individual “brick and mortar” facility that is reporting data to HHS, even in cases when multiple facilities report under the same CMS Certification Number (CCN). Additional datasets and further details related to HHS IDs will be released at a later date.

    With this file, you can associate the reporting facility with its physical location(s).

    On October 8, 2021, this file will now include the HHS IDs for Psychiatric, Rehabilitation and Behavioral hospitals, as well as Ambulatory Surgical Centers and Free Standing Emergency departments wherever these institutions are reporting under https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/covid-19-faqs-hospitals-hospital-laboratory-acute-care-facility-data-reporting.pdf

    Starting on January 6, 2023, this dataset will no longer be posted on weekends.

  2. Provider Relief Fund & Accelerated and Advance Payments

    • data.cdc.gov
    • healthdata.gov
    • +3more
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Jul 10, 2024
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    Provider Relief Fund & Accelerated and Advance Payments [Dataset]. https://data.cdc.gov/Administrative/Provider-Relief-Fund-Accelerated-and-Advance-Payme/v2pi-w3up
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    tsv, xml, application/rdfxml, csv, json, application/rssxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 10, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
    Authors
    Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    We are releasing data that compares the HHS Provider Relief Fund and the CMS Accelerated and Advance Payments by State and provider as of May 15, 2020. This data is already available on other websites, but this chart brings the information together into one view for comparison. You can find additional information on the Accelerated and Advance Payments at the following links:

    Fact Sheet: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/Accelerated-and-Advanced-Payments-Fact-Sheet.pdf;

    Zip file on providers in each state: https://www.cms.gov/files/zip/accelerated-payment-provider-details-state.zip

    Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payments State-by-State information and by Provider Type: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/covid-accelerated-and-advance-payments-state.pdf.

    This file was assembled by HHS via CMS, HRSA and reviewed by leadership and compares the HHS Provider Relief Fund and the CMS Accelerated and Advance Payments by State and provider as of December 4, 2020.

    HHS Provider Relief Fund President Trump is providing support to healthcare providers fighting the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic through the bipartisan Coronavirus Aid, Relief, & Economic Security Act and the Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act, which provide a total of $175 billion for relief funds to hospitals and other healthcare providers on the front lines of the COVID-19 response. This funding supports healthcare-related expenses or lost revenue attributable to COVID-19 and ensures uninsured Americans can get treatment for COVID-19. HHS is distributing this Provider Relief Fund money and these payments do not need to be repaid. The Department allocated $50 billion of the Provider Relief Fund for general distribution to Medicare facilities and providers impacted by COVID-19, based on eligible providers' net reimbursement. It allocated another $22 billion to providers in areas particularly impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak, rural providers, and providers who serve low-income populations and uninsured Americans. HHS will be allocating the remaining funds in the near future.

    As part of the Provider Relief Fund distribution, all providers have 45 days to attest that they meet certain criteria to keep the funding they received, including public disclosure. As of May 15, 2020, there has been a total of $34 billion in attested payments. The chart only includes those providers that have attested to the payments by that date. We will continue to update this information and add the additional providers and payments once their attestation is complete.

    CMS Accelerated and Advance Payments Program On March 28, 2020, to increase cash flow to providers of services and suppliers impacted by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) expanded the Accelerated and Advance Payment Program to a broader group of Medicare Part A providers and Part B suppliers. Beginning on April 26, 2020, CMS stopped accepting new applications for the Advance Payment Program, and CMS began reevaluating all pending and new applications for Accelerated Payments in light of the availability of direct payments made through HHS’s Provider Relief Fund.

    Since expanding the AAP program on March 28, 2020, CMS approved over 21,000 applications totaling $59.6 billion in payments to Part A providers, which includes hospitals, through May 18, 2020. For Part B suppliers—including doctors, non-physician practitioners and durable medical equipment suppliers— during the same time period, CMS approved almost 24,000 applications advancing $40.4 billion in payments. The AAP program is not a grant, and providers and suppliers are required to repay the loan.

    CMS has published AAP data, as required by the Continuing Appropriations and Other Extensions Act of 2021, on this website: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/covid-medicare-accelerated-and-advance-payments-program-covid-19-public-health-emergency-payment.pdf. Requests for additional data related to the program must be submitted through the CMS FOIA office. For more information on how to submit a FOIA request please visit our website at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Legislation/FOIA. The PRF is administered by the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA). For more information on how to submit a request for unpublished program data from HRSA, please visit https://www.hrsa.gov/foia/index.html.

    Provider Relief Fund Data - https://data.cdc.gov/Administrative/Provider-Relief-Fund-COVID-19-High-Impact-Payments/b58h-s9zx

  3. CMS Program Statistics

    • data.wu.ac.at
    application/unknown
    Updated Apr 4, 2018
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    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (2018). CMS Program Statistics [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/odso/data_gov/NDA3NzhkZDUtNDIwZi00Mzk0LWI0MWEtZDBlM2M5NzZjNDI5
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    application/unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The CMS Office of Enterprise Data and Analytics has developed CMS Program Statistics, which includes detailed summary statistics on national health care, Medicare populations, utilization, and expenditures, as well as counts for Medicare-certified institutional and non-institutional providers. CMS Program Statistics is organized into sections which can be downloaded and viewed separately. Tables and maps will be posted as they become finalized. CMS Program Statistics is replacing the Medicare and Medicaid Statistical Supplement, which was published annually in electronic form from 2001-2013.

  4. Weekly Hospital Respiratory Data (HRD) Metrics by Jurisdiction, National...

    • data.cdc.gov
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +1more
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Mar 12, 2025
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    CDC Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion (DHQP) Surveillance Branch, National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) (2025). Weekly Hospital Respiratory Data (HRD) Metrics by Jurisdiction, National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) (Preliminary) [Dataset]. https://data.cdc.gov/w/mpgq-jmmr/tdwk-ruhb?cur=KD90w77-OaA
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    csv, application/rssxml, xml, json, tsv, application/rdfxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 12, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
    Authors
    CDC Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion (DHQP) Surveillance Branch, National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    This dataset represents preliminary weekly hospital respiratory data and metrics aggregated to national and state/territory levels reported to CDC’s National Health Safety Network (NHSN) beginning August 2020. This dataset updates weekly on Wednesdays with preliminary data reported to NHSN for the previous reporting week (Sunday – Saturday).

    Data for reporting dates through April 30, 2024 represent data reported during a previous mandated reporting period as specified by the HHS Secretary. Data for reporting dates May 1, 2024 – October 31, 2024 represent voluntarily reported data in the absence of a mandate. Data for reporting dates beginning November 1, 2024 represent data reported during a current mandated reporting period. All data and metrics capturing information on respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) were voluntarily reported until November 1, 2024. All data included in this dataset represent aggregated counts, and include metrics capturing information specific to hospital capacity, occupancy, hospitalizations, and new hospital admissions with corresponding metrics indicating reporting coverage for a given reporting week. NHSN monitors national and local trends in healthcare system stress and capacity for all acute care and critical access hospitals in the United States.

    For more information on the reporting mandate per the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) requirements, visit: Updates to the Condition of Participation (CoP) Requirements for Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) To Report Acute Respiratory Illnesses.

    For more information regarding NHSN’s collection of these data, including full reporting guidance, visit: NHSN Hospital Respiratory Data.

    For data that is considered final for a given reporting week (Sunday – Saturday), and reflects that which is used in NHSN HRD dashboards for publication each Friday, visit: https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/Weekly-Hospital-Respiratory-Data-HRD-Metrics-by-Ju/ua7e-t2fy/about_data.

    CDC coordinates weekly forecasts of hospitalization admissions based on this data set. More information about flu forecasting can be found at About Flu Forecasting | FluSight | CDC, and information about COVID-19 forecasting and other modeling analyses for the Respiratory Virus Season are available at CFA's Insights for Respiratory Virus Season | CFA | CDC.

    Source: CDC National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN).

    • Data source description (updated November 15, 2024): As of October 9, 2024, Hospital Respiratory Data (HRD; formerly Respiratory Pathogen, Hospital Capacity, and Supply data or 'COVID-19 hospital data') are reported to HHS through CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) based on updated requirements from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). These data were voluntarily reported to NHSN May 1, 2024 until November 1, 2024, at which time CMS began requiring acute care and critical access hospitals to electronically report information via NHSN about COVID-19, influenza, and RSV, hospital bed census and capacity. Hospital bed capacity and occupancy data for all patients and for patients with COVID-19 or influenza for collection dates prior to May 1, 2024, represent data reported during a previously mandated reporting period as specified by the HHS Secretary, and data for collection dates May 1, 2024 – October 31, 2024 represent data reported voluntarily to NHSN. All RSV data through October 31, 2024 represent voluntarily reported data; as such, all voluntarily reported data included in this dataset represent reporting hospitals only for a given week and might not be complete or representative of all hospitals during the specified reporting periods.
    • NHSN monitors national and local trends in healthcare system stress and capacity for all acute care and critical access hospitals in the United States. Data reported by hospitals to NHSN represent aggregated counts and include metrics capturing information specific to hospital capacity, occupancy, hospitalizations, and admissions. Find more information about reporting to NHSN: https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc/hospital-respiratory-reporting.html.
    • Data quality: This dataset represents preliminary weekly hospital respiratory data and metrics aggregated to national and state/territory levels reported to CDC’s National Health Safety Network (NHSN) beginning August 2020, and updates weekly on Wednesdays with preliminary data reported to NHSN for the previous reporting week (Sunday – Saturday). While CDC reviews reported data for completeness and errors and corrects those found, some reporting errors might still exist within the data. CDC and partners work with reporters to correct these errors and update the data in subsequent weeks. Data reported as of December 1, 2020 are subject to thorough, routine data quality review procedures, including identifying and excluding invalid values from metric calculations and application of error correction methodology; data prior to this date may have anomalies that are not yet resolved. Data prior to August 1, 2020, are unavailable. As a result of data quality implementation and submission of any backfilled data, data and metrics might fluctuate or change week-over-week after initial posting.
    • Inclusion criteria and metric calculations:
      • Facility types and status: Many hospital subtypes, including acute care and critical access hospitals, are included in the metric calculations displayed on this page. Psychiatric, rehabilitation, and religious non-medical hospital types are excluded from calculations. Number of reporting hospitals is determined based on the NHSN unique hospital identifier and not aggregated to the CMS certification number (CCN). Only hospitals indicated as active reporters in NHSN are included.
      • For occupancy metrics through week ending October 5, 2024: hospitals that reported those data at least one day during a given week are included in the metric calculation, which are displayed as weekly averages.
      • For occupancy metrics beginning week ending October 12, 2024: hospitals that reported those data for Wednesday during a given week are included in the metric calculation, which are displayed as single day (i.e. Wednesday) values.
      • For new hospital admissions metrics through week ending October 5, 2024: hospitals that reported those data at least one day during a given week are included in the metric calculation, which are displayed as weekly totals. Under previous reporting requirements, new hospital admissions data were reported daily to NHSN, as the number of new hospital admissions for the previous day.
      • For new hospital admissions metrics beginning week ending October 12, 2024: hospitals that reported those data for an entire reporting week are included in the metric calculation, which are displayed as weekly totals. Under current reporting requirements, new admissions data are reported to represent the number of new admissions occurring on a given reporting date (rather than previous day) or during a given reporting week.
    • Find full details on NHSN Hospital Respiratory Data (HRD) reporting guidance, including additional information on bed type definitions at https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc/hospital-respiratory-reporting.html.
    Archived datasets updated during the mandatory hospital reporting period from August 1, 2020, to April 30, 2024:
    1. https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/Weekly-United-States-COVID-19-Hospitalization-Metr/akn2-qxic/about_data
    2. https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/Weekly-United-States-COVID-19-Hospitalization-Metr/82ci-krud/about_data
    3. https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/Respiratory-Virus-Response-RVR-United-States-Hospi/9t9r-e5a3/about_data
    4. https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/Weekly-United-States-COVID-19-Hospitalization-Metr/7dk4-g6vg/about_data
    5. https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/United-States-COVID-19-Hospitalization-Metrics-by-/39z2-9zu6/about_data
    6. https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/g62h-syeh/about_data
    Archived datasets updated during the voluntary hospital reporting period from May 1, 2024, to October 31, 2024:
    1. https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/Weekly-United-States-COVID-19-Hospitalization-Metr/akn2-qxic/about_data
    2. https://data.cdc.gov/Public-Health-Surveillance/Weekly-United-States-Hospitalization-Metrics-by-Ju/ype6-idgy

    Note: December 26, 2024: The following columns were added to this dataset as of December 26th,

  5. d

    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) EHR Incentive Program...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • healthdata.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Oct 3, 2023
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    Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (2023). Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) EHR Incentive Program Measures [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/centers-for-medicare-amp-medicaid-services-cms-ehr-incentive-program-measures
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 3, 2023
    Description

    The CMS EHR Incentive Programs provide incentives to eligible office-based providers and hospitals to adopt electronic health records. Both the Medicare and Medicaid programs have separate criteria and eligible participants. These measures track the percentage of physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, short-term general, Critical Access, and Children's hospitals that have demonstrated meaningul use of certified electronic health record technology and/or adopted, implemented, or ugraded any electronic health record. These measures track the rate of adoption and use of EHR technology certified by HHS in addition to adoption of other non-certified EHR technology. These measures are cumulative, representing the most recent data.

  6. HHS Provider Relief Fund

    • data.cdc.gov
    • healthdata.gov
    • +1more
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Mar 21, 2025
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    Health Resources & Services Administration (2025). HHS Provider Relief Fund [Dataset]. https://data.cdc.gov/Administrative/HHS-Provider-Relief-Fund/kh8y-3es6
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    application/rssxml, tsv, json, csv, xml, application/rdfxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 21, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Health Resources and Services Administrationhttp://www.hrsa.gov/
    Authors
    Health Resources & Services Administration
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    HHS is providing support to healthcare providers fighting the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic through the bipartisan Coronavirus Aid, Relief, & Economic Security (CARES) Act; the Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act (PPPHCEA); and the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act, which provide a total of $178 billion for relief funds to hospitals and other healthcare providers on the front lines of the COVID-19 response. This funding supports healthcare-related expenses or lost revenue attributable to COVID-19 and ensures uninsured Americans can get treatment for COVID-19. HHS is distributing this Provider Relief Fund (PRF) money and these payments do not need to be repaid.

    The Department allocated $50 billion in PRF payments for general distribution to Medicare facilities and providers impacted by COVID-19, based on eligible providers' net reimbursement. HHS has made other PRF distributions to a wide array of health care providers and more information on those distributions can be found here: https://www.hhs.gov/coronavirus/cares-act-provider-relief-fund/data/index.html

  7. COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility US...

    • data.pa.gov
    Updated Mar 22, 2025
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    United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) (2025). COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility US Federal Health and Human Services (HHS) [Dataset]. https://data.pa.gov/Covid-19/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/c7w7-maff
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    tsv, application/rdfxml, xml, csv, application/rssxml, application/geo+json, kmz, kmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 22, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Authors
    United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The following dataset provides facility-level data for hospital utilization aggregated on a weekly basis (Friday to Thursday). These are derived from reports with facility-level granularity across two main sources: (1) HHS TeleTracking, and (2) reporting provided directly to HHS Protect by state/territorial health departments on behalf of their healthcare facilities.

    The hospital population includes all hospitals registered with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) as of June 1, 2020. It includes non-CMS hospitals that have reported since July 15, 2020. It does not include psychiatric, rehabilitation, Indian Health Service (IHS) facilities, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities, Defense Health Agency (DHA) facilities, and religious non-medical facilities.

    For a given entry, the term “collection_week” signifies the start of the period that is aggregated. For example, a “collection_week” of 2020-11-20 means the average/sum/coverage of the elements captured from that given facility starting and including Friday, November 20, 2020, and ending and including reports for Thursday, November 26, 2020.

    Reported elements include an append of either “_coverage”, “_sum”, or “_avg”.

    A “_coverage” append denotes how many times the facility reported that element during that collection week. A “_sum” append denotes the sum of the reports provided for that facility for that element during that collection week. A “_avg” append is the average of the reports provided for that facility for that element during that collection week. The file will be updated weekly. No statistical analysis is applied to impute non-response. For averages, calculations are based on the number of values collected for a given hospital in that collection week. Suppression is applied to the file for sums and averages less than four (4). In these cases, the field will be replaced with “-999,999”.

    This data is preliminary and subject to change as more data become available. Data is available starting on July 31, 2020.

    Sometimes, reports for a given facility will be provided to both HHS TeleTracking and HHS Protect. When this occurs, to ensure that there are not duplicate reports, deduplication is applied according to prioritization rules within HHS Protect.

    For influenza fields listed in the file, the current HHS guidance marks these fields as optional. As a result, coverage of these elements are varied.

  8. Managed Care Information for Medicaid and CHIP Beneficiaries by Year

    • catalog.data.gov
    • healthdata.gov
    • +3more
    Updated Feb 3, 2025
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    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (2025). Managed Care Information for Medicaid and CHIP Beneficiaries by Year [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/managed-care-information-for-medicaid-and-chip-beneficiaries-by-year-dc72d
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 3, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
    Description

    This data set presents annual enrollment counts of Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries by managed care participation (comprehensive managed care, primary care case management, MLTSS, including PACE, behavioral health organizations, nonmedical prepaid health plans, medical-only prepaid health plans, and other). There are three metrics presented: (1) the number of beneficiaries ever enrolled in each managed care plan type over the year (duplicated count); (2) the number of beneficiaries enrolled in each managed care plan type as of an individual’s last month of enrollment (duplicated count); and (3) average monthly enrollment in each managed care plan type. These metrics are based on data in the T-MSIS Analytic Files (TAF). Some cells have a value of “DS”. Some states have serious data quality issues, making the data unusable for calculating these measures. To assess data quality, analysts used measures featured in the DQ Atlas. Data for a state and year are considered unusable or of high concern based on DQ Atlas thresholds for the topics Enrollment in CMC, Enrollment in PCCM Programs, and Enrollment in BHO Plans. Please refer to the DQ Atlas at http://medicaid.gov/dq-atlas for more information about data quality assessment methods. Some cells have a value of “DS”. This indicates that data were suppressed for confidentiality reasons because the group included fewer than 11 beneficiaries.

  9. Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) , Medicare Claims data

    • data.wu.ac.at
    • catalog.data.gov
    application/unknown
    Updated Jul 9, 2018
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    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (2018). Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) , Medicare Claims data [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov/YmM0MmViMmEtMTcxNy00YWY4LTg5Y2EtZDEyMjhmODNjZTA3
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    application/unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 9, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Description

    2003 forward. CMS compiles claims data for Medicare and Medicaid patients across a variety of categories and years. This includes Inpatient and Outpatient claims, Master Beneficiary Summary Files, and many other files. Indicators from this data source have been computed by personnel in CDC's Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention (DHDSP). This is one of the datasets provided by the National Cardiovascular Disease Surveillance System. The system is designed to integrate multiple indicators from many data sources to provide a comprehensive picture of the public health burden of CVDs and associated risk factors in the United States. The data are organized by location (national and state) and indicator. The data can be plotted as trends and stratified by sex and race/ethnicity.

  10. NPPES Plan and Provider Enumeration System

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 20, 2019
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    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (2019). NPPES Plan and Provider Enumeration System [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/cms/nppes
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    zip(0 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 20, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Context

    The CMS National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES) was developed as part of the Administrative Simplification provisions in the original HIPAA act. The primary purpose of NPPES was to develop a unique identifier for each physician that billed medicare and medicaid. This identifier is now known as the National Provider Identifier Standard (NPI) which is a required 10 digit number that is unique to an individual provider at the national level.

    Once an NPI record is assigned to a healthcare provider, parts of the NPI record that have public relevance, including the provider’s name, speciality, and practice address are published in a searchable website as well as downloadable file of zipped data containing all of the FOIA disclosable health care provider data in NPPES and a separate PDF file of code values which documents and lists the descriptions for all of the codes found in the data file.

    Content

    The dataset contains the latest NPI downloadable file in an easy to query BigQuery table, npi_raw. In addition, there is a second table, npi_optimized which harnesses the power of Big Query’s next-generation columnar storage format to provide an analytical view of the NPI data containing description fields for the codes based on the mappings in Data Dissemination Public File - Code Values documentation as well as external lookups to the healthcare provider taxonomy codes . While this generates hundreds of columns, BigQuery makes it possible to process all this data effectively and have a convenient single lookup table for all provider information.

    Fork this kernel to get started.

    Acknowledgements

    https://bigquery.cloud.google.com/dataset/bigquery-public-data:nppes?_ga=2.117120578.-577194880.1523455401

    https://console.cloud.google.com/marketplace/details/hhs/nppes?filter=category:science-research

    Dataset Source: Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source - http://www.data.gov/privacy-policy#data_policy — and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.

    Banner Photo by @rawpixel from Unplash.

    Inspiration

    What are the top ten most common types of physicians in Mountain View?

    What are the names and phone numbers of dentists in California who studied public health?

  11. Provider of Services File - Hospital & Non-Hospital Facilities

    • healthdata.gov
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +3more
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Dec 22, 2021
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    data.cms.gov (2021). Provider of Services File - Hospital & Non-Hospital Facilities [Dataset]. https://healthdata.gov/dataset/Provider-of-Services-File-Hospital-Non-Hospital-Fa/m5p7-uvg2
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    csv, application/rdfxml, xml, application/rssxml, tsv, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 22, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
    Description

    Please be advised that as of Q4 2023 there is a new Provider of Service file (POS) that contains the provider and certification details for Home Health Agencies (HHAs), Hospices, and Ambulatory Surgical Centers (ASCs). Data contained in this file are extracted from the Internet Quality Improvement and Evaluation System (iQIES) environment and will be updated quarterly along with the other two POS files.

    The Provider of Services File - Hospital & Non-Hospital Facilities data provide critical resources for other federal regulator requirements as well as supports the ongoing quality & research efforts sponsored by CMS. In this file you will find provider certification, termination, accreditation, ownership, name, location and other characteristics organized by CMS Certification Number.

  12. Medicare Part D Opioid Prescriber Summary File 2013

    • hhs-opioid-codeathon.data.socrata.com
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Mar 26, 2018
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    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) (2018). Medicare Part D Opioid Prescriber Summary File 2013 [Dataset]. https://hhs-opioid-codeathon.data.socrata.com/HHS-Datasets/Medicare-Part-D-Opioid-Prescriber-Summary-File-201/uh86-cddn
    Explore at:
    tsv, csv, application/rdfxml, application/rssxml, xml, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 26, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Authors
    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has prepared a public data set, the Medicare Part D Opioid Prescriber Summary File, which presents information on the individual opioid prescribing rates of health providers that participate in the Medicare Part D program. This file is a prescriber-level data set that provides data on the number and percentage of prescription claims (includes new prescriptions and refills) for opioid drugs, and contains information on each provider’s name, specialty, state, and ZIP code. This summary file was derived from the 2013 Part D Prescriber Summary Table (https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/Medicare-Provider-Charge-Data/PartD2013.html).

  13. Health Insurance Marketplace

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated May 1, 2017
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    US Department of Health and Human Services (2017). Health Insurance Marketplace [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/hhs/health-insurance-marketplace
    Explore at:
    zip(868821924 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 1, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    US Department of Health and Human Services
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    The Health Insurance Marketplace Public Use Files contain data on health and dental plans offered to individuals and small businesses through the US Health Insurance Marketplace.

    median plan premiums

    Exploration Ideas

    To help get you started, here are some data exploration ideas:

    • How do plan rates and benefits vary across states?
    • How do plan benefits relate to plan rates?
    • How do plan rates vary by age?
    • How do plans vary across insurance network providers?

    See this forum thread for more ideas, and post there if you want to add your own ideas or answer some of the open questions!

    Data Description

    This data was originally prepared and released by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Please read the CMS Disclaimer-User Agreement before using this data.

    Here, we've processed the data to facilitate analytics. This processed version has three components:

    1. Original versions of the data

    The original versions of the 2014, 2015, 2016 data are available in the "raw" directory of the download and "../input/raw" on Kaggle Scripts. Search for "dictionaries" on this page to find the data dictionaries describing the individual raw files.

    2. Combined CSV files that contain

    In the top level directory of the download ("../input" on Kaggle Scripts), there are six CSV files that contain the combined at across all years:

    • BenefitsCostSharing.csv
    • BusinessRules.csv
    • Network.csv
    • PlanAttributes.csv
    • Rate.csv
    • ServiceArea.csv

    Additionally, there are two CSV files that facilitate joining data across years:

    • Crosswalk2015.csv - joining 2014 and 2015 data
    • Crosswalk2016.csv - joining 2015 and 2016 data

    3. SQLite database

    The "database.sqlite" file contains tables corresponding to each of the processed CSV files.

    The code to create the processed version of this data is available on GitHub.

  14. Weekly United States COVID-19 Hospitalization Metrics by County (Historical)...

    • data.virginia.gov
    • healthdata.gov
    • +1more
    csv, json, rdf, xsl
    Updated Feb 23, 2025
    + more versions
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    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2025). Weekly United States COVID-19 Hospitalization Metrics by County (Historical) – ARCHIVED [Dataset]. https://data.virginia.gov/dataset/weekly-united-states-covid-19-hospitalization-metrics-by-county-historical-archived
    Explore at:
    rdf, csv, xsl, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 23, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Note: After May 3, 2024, this dataset will no longer be updated because hospitals are no longer required to report data on COVID-19 hospital admissions, hospital capacity, or occupancy data to HHS through CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN). The related CDC COVID Data Tracker site was revised or retired on May 10, 2023.

    Note: May 3,2024: Due to incomplete or missing hospital data received for the April 21,2024 through April 27, 2024 reporting period, the COVID-19 Hospital Admissions Level could not be calculated for CNMI and will be reported as “NA” or “Not Available” in the COVID-19 Hospital Admissions Level data released on May 3, 2024.

    This dataset represents COVID-19 hospitalization data and metrics aggregated to county or county-equivalent, for all counties or county-equivalents (including territories) in the United States as of the initial date of reporting for each weekly metric. COVID-19 hospitalization data are reported to CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network, which monitors national and local trends in healthcare system stress, capacity, and community disease levels for approximately 6,000 hospitals in the United States. Data reported by hospitals to NHSN and included in this dataset represent aggregated counts and include metrics capturing information specific to COVID-19 hospital admissions, and inpatient and ICU bed capacity occupancy.

    Reporting information:

    • As of December 15, 2022, COVID-19 hospital data are required to be reported to NHSN, which monitors national and local trends in healthcare system stress, capacity, and community disease levels for approximately 6,000 hospitals in the United States. Data reported by hospitals to NHSN represent aggregated counts and include metrics capturing information specific to hospital capacity, occupancy, hospitalizations, and admissions. Prior to December 15, 2022, hospitals reported data directly to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) or via a state submission for collection in the HHS Unified Hospital Data Surveillance System (UHDSS).
    • While CDC reviews these data for errors and corrects those found, some reporting errors might still exist within the data. To minimize errors and inconsistencies in data reported, CDC removes outliers before calculating the metrics. CDC and partners work with reporters to correct these errors and update the data in subsequent weeks.
    • Many hospital subtypes, including acute care and critical access hospitals, as well as Veterans Administration, Defense Health Agency, and Indian Health Service hospitals, are included in the metric calculations provided in this report. Psychiatric, rehabilitation, and religious non-medical hospital types are excluded from calculations.
    • Data are aggregated and displayed for hospitals with the same Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Certification Number (CCN), which are assigned by CMS to counties based on the CMS Provider of Services files.
    • Full details on COVID-19 hospital data reporting guidance can be found here: https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/covid-19-faqs-hospitals-hospital-laboratory-acute-care-facility-data-reporting.pdf
    Calculation of county-level hospital metrics:
    • County-level hospital data are derived using calculations performed at the Health Service Area (HSA) level. An HSA is defined by CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics as a geographic area containing at least one county which is self-contained with respect to the population’s provision of routine hospital care. Every county in the United States is assigned to an HSA, and each HSA must contain at least one hospital. Therefore, use of HSAs in the calculation of local hospital metrics allows for more accurate characterization of the relationship between health care utilization and health status at the local level.
    • Data presented at the county-level represent admissions, hosp

  15. d

    COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Feb 14, 2025
    + more versions
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    data.ct.gov (2025). COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/covid-19-reported-patient-impact-and-hospital-capacity-by-facility-cd5bb
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 14, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Description

    The "COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility" dataset from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, filtered for Connecticut. View the full dataset and detailed metadata here: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/anag-cw7u The following dataset provides facility-level data for hospital utilization aggregated on a weekly basis (Friday to Thursday). These are derived from reports with facility-level granularity across two main sources: (1) HHS TeleTracking, and (2) reporting provided directly to HHS Protect by state/territorial health departments on behalf of their healthcare facilities. The hospital population includes all hospitals registered with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) as of June 1, 2020. It includes non-CMS hospitals that have reported since July 15, 2020. It does not include psychiatric, rehabilitation, Indian Health Service (IHS) facilities, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities, Defense Health Agency (DHA) facilities, and religious non-medical facilities. For a given entry, the term “collection_week” signifies the start of the period that is aggregated. For example, a “collection_week” of 2020-11-20 means the average/sum/coverage of the elements captured from that given facility starting and including Friday, November 20, 2020, and ending and including reports for Thursday, November 26, 2020. Reported elements include an append of either “_coverage”, “_sum”, or “_avg”. A “_coverage” append denotes how many times the facility reported that element during that collection week. A “_sum” append denotes the sum of the reports provided for that facility for that element during that collection week. A “_avg” append is the average of the reports provided for that facility for that element during that collection week. The file will be updated weekly. No statistical analysis is applied to impute non-response. For averages, calculations are based on the number of values collected for a given hospital in that collection week. Suppression is applied to the file for sums and averages less than four (4). In these cases, the field will be replaced with “-999,999”. This data is preliminary and subject to change as more data become available. Data is available starting on July 31, 2020. Sometimes, reports for a given facility will be provided to both HHS TeleTracking and HHS Protect. When this occurs, to ensure that there are not duplicate reports, deduplication is applied according to prioritization rules within HHS Protect. For influenza fields listed in the file, the current HHS guidance marks these fields as optional. As a result, coverage of these elements are varied. On May 3, 2021, the following fields have been added to this data set. hhs_ids previous_day_admission_adult_covid_confirmed_7_day_coverage previous_day_admission_pediatric_covid_confirmed_7_day_coverage previous_day_admission_adult_covid_suspected_7_day_coverage previous_day_admission_pediatric_covid_suspected_7_day_coverage previous_week_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_administered_7_day_sum total_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_none_7_day_sum total_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_one_7_day_sum total_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_all_7_day_sum previous_week_patients_covid_vaccinated_doses_one_7_day_sum previous_week_patients_covid_vaccinated_doses_all_7_day_sum On May 8, 2021, this data set has been converted to a corrected data set. The corrections applied to this data set are to smooth out data anomalies caused by keyed in data errors. To help determine which records have had corrections made to it. An additional Boolean field called is_corrected has been added. To see the numbers as reported by the facilities, go to: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/uqq2-txqb On May 13, 2021 Changed vaccination fields from sum to max or min fields. This reflects the maximum or minimum number report

  16. Medicare Provider Payment Data - Home Health Agencies

    • data.wu.ac.at
    application/unknown
    Updated Apr 10, 2018
    + more versions
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    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (2018). Medicare Provider Payment Data - Home Health Agencies [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov/Y2E5OWVjNzQtNmNiNC00OWNhLThiN2QtZjk0MTE3ODkwNDk5
    Explore at:
    application/unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 10, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Description

    The Home Health Agency PUF contains information on utilization, payment (Medicare payment and standard payment), and submitted charges organized by CMS Certification Number (6-digit provider identification number), Home Health Resource Group (HHRG), and state of service. This PUF is based on information from CMSs Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse (CCW) data files. The data in the Home Health Agency PUF covers calendar year 2013 and contains 100 percent final-action (i.e., all claim adjustments have been resolved) home health agency institutional claims for the Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) population.

  17. Medicare FFS Jurisdiction Error Rate Contribution Data

    • data.wu.ac.at
    application/unknown
    Updated Apr 4, 2018
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    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (2018). Medicare FFS Jurisdiction Error Rate Contribution Data [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/odso/data_gov/OTdiMGJjNjgtNTdmMC00ZjQxLWFkOGItOTRjYzFmMDg5ZDg3
    Explore at:
    application/unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services CMS is dedicated to continually strengthening and improving the Medicare program, which provides vital services to millions of Americans. CMS uses data from the Comprehensive Error Rate Testing CERT program and other sources of information to address improper payments in the Medicare FFS program through various corrective actions. Each year, the Department of Health and Human Services Agency Financial Report outlines actions the agency will implement to prevent and reduce improper payments. CMS and the Medicare Administrative Contractors MACs aim to help improve provider compliance with Medicare FFS policies and requirements. Provider compliance is fundamental to reducing improper payment rates. The maps displays the 2014 and 2015 improper payment rate information for the Medicare FFS program for A-B, Home Health-Hospice, and Durable Medical Equipment DME MAC jurisdictions. The jurisdictions listed are based on the MAC jurisdictions assigned during the 2014 and 2015 Medicare FFS improper payment report periods i.e., July 1, 2012 - June 30, 2013, and July 1, 2013 - June 30, 2014, respectively. An Error Rate Contribution Score was assigned to each jurisdiction to reflect two key variables, the jurisdictions improper payment rate and share of national improper payments.

  18. Weekly United States Hospitalization Metrics by Jurisdiction, During...

    • healthdata.gov
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +1more
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated May 11, 2024
    + more versions
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    data.cdc.gov (2024). Weekly United States Hospitalization Metrics by Jurisdiction, During Mandatory Reporting Period from August 1, 2020 to April 30, 2024, and for Data Reported Voluntarily Beginning May 1, 2024, National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) - ARCHIVED [Dataset]. https://healthdata.gov/dataset/Weekly-United-States-Hospitalization-Metrics-by-Ju/kruc-9unj
    Explore at:
    json, application/rdfxml, csv, tsv, xml, application/rssxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 11, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    data.cdc.gov
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Note: After November 1, 2024, this dataset will no longer be updated due to a transition in NHSN Hospital Respiratory Data reporting that occurred on Friday, November 1, 2024. For more information on NHSN Hospital Respiratory Data reporting, please visit https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc/hospital-respiratory-reporting.html.

    Due to a recent update in voluntary NHSN Hospital Respiratory Data reporting that occurred on Wednesday, October 9, 2024, reporting levels and other data displayed on this page may fluctuate week-over-week beginning Friday, October 18, 2024. For more information on NHSN Hospital Respiratory Data reporting, please visit https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc/hospital-respiratory-reporting.html. Find more information about the updated CMS requirements: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2024/08/28/2024-17021/medicare-and-medicaid-programs-and-the-childrens-health-insurance-program-hospital-inpatient. 

    This dataset represents weekly respiratory virus-related hospitalization data and metrics aggregated to national and state/territory levels reported during two periods: 1) data for collection dates from August 1, 2020 to April 30, 2024, represent data reported by hospitals during a mandated reporting period as specified by the HHS Secretary; and 2) data for collection dates beginning May 1, 2024, represent data reported voluntarily by hospitals to CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN). NHSN monitors national and local trends in healthcare system stress and capacity for up to approximately 6,000 hospitals in the United States. Data reported represent aggregated counts and include metrics capturing information specific to COVID-19- and influenza-related hospitalizations, hospital occupancy, and hospital capacity. Find more information about reporting to NHSN at: https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc/hospital-respiratory-reporting.html.

    Source: COVID-19 hospitalization data reported to CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN).

    • Data source description (updated October 18, 2024): As of October 9, 2024, Hospital Respiratory Data (HRD; formerly Respiratory Pathogen, Hospital Capacity, and Supply data or ‘COVID-19 hospital data’) are reported to HHS through CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network based on updated requirements from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). These data are voluntarily reported to NHSN as of May 1, 2024 until November 1, 2024, at which time CMS will require acute care and critical access hospitals to electronically report information via NHSN about COVID-19, Influenza, and RSV, hospital bed census and capacity, and limited patient demographic information, including age. Data for collection dates prior to May 1, 2024, represent data reported during a previously mandated reporting period as specified by the HHS Secretary. Data for collection dates May 1, 2024, and onwards represent data reported voluntarily to NHSN; as such, data included represents reporting hospitals only for a given week and might not be complete or representative of all hospitals. NHSN monitors national and local trends in healthcare system stress and capacity for approximately 6,000 hospitals in the United States. Data reported by hospitals to NHSN represent aggregated counts and include metrics capturing information specific to hospital capacity, occupancy, hospitalizations, and admissions. Find more information about reporting to NHSN: https://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc/hospital-respiratory-reporting.html. Find more information about the updated CMS requirements: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2024/08/28/2024-17021/medicare-and-medicaid-programs-and-the-childrens-health-insurance-program-hospital-inpatient. 
    • Data quality: While CDC reviews reported data for completeness and errors and corrects those found, some reporting errors might still exist within the data. CDC and partners work with reporters to correct these errors and update the data in subse

  19. Basic Stand Alone Medicare Inpatient Claims PUF

    • data.wu.ac.at
    application/unknown
    Updated Apr 4, 2018
    + more versions
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    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (2018). Basic Stand Alone Medicare Inpatient Claims PUF [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov/NTlhOTAxODEtZGM4Ny00OTc3LWExZDAtMTBkNDU5Njc4YWNl
    Explore at:
    application/unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    This release contains the Basic Stand Alone (BSA) Inpatient Public Use Files (PUF) named CMS 2008 BSA Inpatient Claims PUF with information from 2008 Medicare inpatient claims. This is a claim-level file in which each record is an inpatient claim incurred by a 5 percent sample of Medicare beneficiaries.

  20. COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility

    • data.ct.gov
    • healthdata.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Mar 2, 2025
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    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (2025). COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility [Dataset]. https://data.ct.gov/Health-and-Human-Services/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/vvtn-9xef
    Explore at:
    xml, application/rdfxml, csv, tsv, application/rssxml, application/geo+json, kml, kmzAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 2, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Department of Health and Human Serviceshttp://www.hhs.gov/
    Authors
    U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    The "COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility" dataset from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, filtered for Connecticut. View the full dataset and detailed metadata here: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/anag-cw7u

    The following dataset provides facility-level data for hospital utilization aggregated on a weekly basis (Friday to Thursday). These are derived from reports with facility-level granularity across two main sources: (1) HHS TeleTracking, and (2) reporting provided directly to HHS Protect by state/territorial health departments on behalf of their healthcare facilities.

    The hospital population includes all hospitals registered with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) as of June 1, 2020. It includes non-CMS hospitals that have reported since July 15, 2020. It does not include psychiatric, rehabilitation, Indian Health Service (IHS) facilities, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities, Defense Health Agency (DHA) facilities, and religious non-medical facilities.

    For a given entry, the term “collection_week” signifies the start of the period that is aggregated. For example, a “collection_week” of 2020-11-20 means the average/sum/coverage of the elements captured from that given facility starting and including Friday, November 20, 2020, and ending and including reports for Thursday, November 26, 2020.

    Reported elements include an append of either “_coverage”, “_sum”, or “_avg”.

    A “_coverage” append denotes how many times the facility reported that element during that collection week.

    A “_sum” append denotes the sum of the reports provided for that facility for that element during that collection week.

    A “_avg” append is the average of the reports provided for that facility for that element during that collection week.

    The file will be updated weekly. No statistical analysis is applied to impute non-response. For averages, calculations are based on the number of values collected for a given hospital in that collection week. Suppression is applied to the file for sums and averages less than four (4). In these cases, the field will be replaced with “-999,999”.

    This data is preliminary and subject to change as more data become available. Data is available starting on July 31, 2020.

    Sometimes, reports for a given facility will be provided to both HHS TeleTracking and HHS Protect. When this occurs, to ensure that there are not duplicate reports, deduplication is applied according to prioritization rules within HHS Protect.

    For influenza fields listed in the file, the current HHS guidance marks these fields as optional. As a result, coverage of these elements are varied.

    On May 3, 2021, the following fields have been added to this data set. hhs_ids previous_day_admission_adult_covid_confirmed_7_day_coverage previous_day_admission_pediatric_covid_confirmed_7_day_coverage previous_day_admission_adult_covid_suspected_7_day_coverage previous_day_admission_pediatric_covid_suspected_7_day_coverage previous_week_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_administered_7_day_sum total_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_none_7_day_sum total_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_one_7_day_sum total_personnel_covid_vaccinated_doses_all_7_day_sum previous_week_patients_covid_vaccinated_doses_one_7_day_sum previous_week_patients_covid_vaccinated_doses_all_7_day_sum

    On May 8, 2021, this data set has been converted to a corrected data set. The corrections applied to this data set are to smooth out data anomalies caused by keyed in data errors. To help determine which records have had corrections made to it. An additional Boolean field called is_corrected has been added. To see the numbers as reported by the facilities, go to: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/uqq2-txqb

    On May 13, 2021 Changed vaccination fields from sum to max or min fields. This reflects the maximum or minimum number reported for that metric in a given week.

    On June 7, 2021 Changed vaccination fields from max or min fields to Wednesday collected fields only. This reflects that these fields are only reported on Wednesdays in a given week.

    On 9/20/2021, the following has been updated: The use of analytic dataset as a source.

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(2024). HHS IDs [Dataset]. https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/HHS-IDs/vz64-k9wr
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HHS IDs

Explore at:
8 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
xml, csv, application/rdfxml, application/rssxml, tsv, kmz, kml, application/geo+jsonAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
May 3, 2024
License

https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

Description

After May 3, 2024, this dataset and webpage will no longer be updated because hospitals are no longer required to report data on COVID-19 hospital admissions, and hospital capacity and occupancy data, to HHS through CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network. Data voluntarily reported to NHSN after May 1, 2024, will be available starting May 10, 2024, at COVID Data Tracker Hospitalizations.

This file helps define the HHS_ID column that is published in both the

'COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and Hospital Capacity by Facility' found here: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/anag-cw7u

COVID-19 Reported Patient Impact and 'Hospital Capacity by Facility -- RAW' found here: https://healthdata.gov/Hospital/COVID-19-Reported-Patient-Impact-and-Hospital-Capa/uqq2-txqb

As a part of an effort to improve the granularity of spatial data, unique identifiers (named “HHS IDs” in the datasets) have been assigned to each individual facility. These unique identifiers are provided so data users can reference each individual “brick and mortar” facility that is reporting data to HHS, even in cases when multiple facilities report under the same CMS Certification Number (CCN). Additional datasets and further details related to HHS IDs will be released at a later date.

With this file, you can associate the reporting facility with its physical location(s).

On October 8, 2021, this file will now include the HHS IDs for Psychiatric, Rehabilitation and Behavioral hospitals, as well as Ambulatory Surgical Centers and Free Standing Emergency departments wherever these institutions are reporting under https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/covid-19-faqs-hospitals-hospital-laboratory-acute-care-facility-data-reporting.pdf

Starting on January 6, 2023, this dataset will no longer be posted on weekends.

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