As of 2019, 62.5 percent of children ages three to five that had any nonparental care in the United States were in center based programs. 22.7 percent of three to five year old children were in the care of a relative in that same year.
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This feature class/shapefile contains locations of child day care centers for the 50 states of the USA, Washington D.C., and Puerto Rico. The dataset only includes center based child day care locations (including those located at schools and religious institutes) and does not include group, home, and family based child day cares. The SOURCEDATE is an indicator of when the source data was last acquired or was publicly available. All the data was acquired from respective states departments or their open source websites and only contains data provided by these sources. Information on the source of data for each state is available in the SOURCE field of the feature class/shapefile. The TYPE attribute is a common categorization of child day care centers for all states which categorizes every child day care into Center Based, School Based, Head Start, or Religious Facility solely based on the type of facility where the child day care center is geographically located. This update has 2608 fewer records than the previous version based on source data
In 2023, the total number of children registered in daycare centers in South Korea amounted to around 1.01 million. Since 2018, the number of children enrolled in daycare centers in South Korea has gradually decreased over time.
This table contains data on the number of licensed day care center slots (facility capacity) per 1,000 children aged 0-5 years in California, its regions, counties, cities, towns, and census tracts. The table contains 2015 data, and includes type of facility (day care center or infant center). Access to child care has become a critical support for working families. Many working families find high-quality child care unaffordable, and the increasing cost of child care can be crippling for low-income families and single parents. These barriers can impact parental choices of child care. Increased availability of child care facilities can positively impact families by providing more choices of child care in terms of price and quality. Estimates for this indicator are provided for the total population, and are not available by race/ethnicity. More information on the data table and a data dictionary can be found in the Data and Resources section. The licensed day care centers table is part of a series of indicators in the Healthy Communities Data and Indicators Project (HCI) of the Office of Health Equity. The goal of HCI is to enhance public health by providing data, a standardized set of statistical measures, and tools that a broad array of sectors can use for planning healthy communities and evaluating the impact of plans, projects, policy, and environmental changes on community health. The creation of healthy social, economic, and physical environments that promote healthy behaviors and healthy outcomes requires coordination and collaboration across multiple sectors, including transportation, housing, education, agriculture and others. Statistical metrics, or indicators, are needed to help local, regional, and state public health and partner agencies assess community environments and plan for healthy communities that optimize public health. More information on HCI can be found here: https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/OHE/CDPH%20Document%20Library/Accessible%202%20CDPH_Healthy_Community_Indicators1pager5-16-12.pdf The format of the licensed day care centers table is based on the standardized data format for all HCI indicators. As a result, this data table contains certain variables used in the HCI project (e.g., indicator ID, and indicator definition). Some of these variables may contain the same value for all observations.
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Graph and download economic data for All Employees, Child Care Services (CEU6562440001) from Jan 1985 to Feb 2025 about day care, health, establishment survey, education, child, services, employment, and USA.
In 2024, about 18 percent of children in German day care centers were younger than three years. This statistic shows the distribution of children in day care centers by age group in Germany in 2024. Most children going to day care were aged three to five years old.
Number and percentage of children aged 0 to 5 years participating in early learning and child care.
In 2020, the annual costs for full-time care for an infant in the state of New York totaled to 22,500 U.S. dollars. Annual full-time care costs for infants in Maryland was the highest in the country in that year, coming in at 24,500 U.S. dollars.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by County data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by county for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
This database provides county-level childcare prices for most states in the United States over 14 years. The childcare price data are combined with county-level data from the American Community Survey to provide demographic and economic characteristics of the counties. The database facilitates research on childcare prices by county and demographic and economic characteristics.
Dataset contains information on center-based child care and summer camp sites and inspections related to the sites.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
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Every day, schools, child care centres and licensed home child care agencies report to the Ministry of Education on children, students and staff that have positive cases of COVID-19.
If there is a discrepancy between numbers reported here and those reported publicly by a Public Health Unit, please consider the number reported by the Public Health Unit to be the most up-to-date.
Licensed child care centres and home child care agencies report when a centre or home is closed to the Ministry of Education, using the Child Care Licensing System. Data is taken from the system at 12:00 pm the previous day.
This dataset is subject to change.
Data is only updated on weekdays excluding provincial holidays
Effective June 15, 2022, board and school staff will not be expected to report student/staff absences and closures in the Absence Reporting Tool. The ministry will no longer report absence rates or school/child care closures on Ontario.ca for the remainder of the school year.
This report provides a summary of COVID-19 activity in:
Data includes :
Note: In some instances the type of cases are not identified due to privacy considerations.
This report lists child care centres and home child care agencies that currently have active cases of COVID-19.
Data includes :
Note: Total number of confirmed cases may include other people (e.g., parents, other people who live at a home child care location), so the number of confirmed cases of children and staff may not equal the total number of confirmed cases.
In 2024, the number of daycare centers for children in Japan amounted to around 23.6 thousand facilities. The number of children enrolled in those daycare centers decreased in recent years to less than two million.
Information on OCFS regulated child care programs, which includes program overview information and violation history.
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Aggregated counts of licensed childcare facilities and how many were inspected on time, are overdue for inspection, or inspection status is unknown, by state. Data was compiled by USAFacts from public-facing, state government search tools across 41 states, resulting in data about 148,200 childcare facilities.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Children Served by ZIP Code data set includes demographic data of children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data aggregated by ZIP code for each month of the quarter. Counts less than 5 are masked with an asterisk (*) to protect the confidentiality of individuals in this report.
The Monthly Child Care Services Data Report - Child Care Facilities data set includes the list of child care facilities and quality ratings providing services to children receiving Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) assistance. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Office of Child Care (OCC) collects data regarding the children and families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) as well as the types of child care settings and facilities providing services. Each quarterly data set contains data for each month of the quarter.
In 2023, the total number of children's daycare centers, including state-run and private, in South Korea fell to almost 29 thousand. During the examined period, the number of daycare centers in South Korea gradually decreased over time.
The DCYF Licensed Childcare Provider data set is comprised of license and facility information for active childcare provider licenses at the point in time the data is extracted.
As of 2019, 62.5 percent of children ages three to five that had any nonparental care in the United States were in center based programs. 22.7 percent of three to five year old children were in the care of a relative in that same year.