Facebook
Twitterhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for All Employees, Skilled Nursing Care Facilities (CES6562310001) from Jan 1990 to Aug 2025 about nursing homes, nursing, health, establishment survey, education, services, employment, and USA.
Facebook
TwitterAccording to 2023 data, the majority of the 492,000 nursing assistants in U.S. nursing homes was under the age of 45 years. Just five percent of nursing assistants were 65 years or older.
Facebook
TwitterNursing Home Compare has detailed information about every Medicare and Medicaid nursing home in the country. A nursing home is a place for people who can’t be cared for at home and need 24-hour nursing care. These are the official datasets used on the Medicare.gov Nursing Home Compare Website provided by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. These data allow you to compare the quality of care at every Medicare and Medicaid-certified nursing home in the country, including over 15,000 nationwide.
Facebook
TwitterThe compendium contains figures and tables presenting data on all Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing homes in the United States as well as the residents in these nursing homes. A series of graphs and maps highlights some of the most interesting data, while detailed data are available in accompanying tables.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/8914/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/8914/terms
The 1985 National Nursing Home Survey was designed to gather a variety of data on all types of nursing homes providing nursing care in the United States. In this collection data are available on nursing and related care facilities, services provided by the facilities, residents of the nursing homes, and discharges. Nursing home care is examined from the perspectives of both the recipients and the providers of services. Information about patients, both current and discharged, includes basic demographic characteristics, marital status, place of residence prior to admission, health status, services received, and, for discharges, the outcomes of care. A family member of both current and discharged patients was contacted by telephone to obtain data on socioeconomic status and prior episodes of health care. Facility-level data include basic characteristics such as size, ownership, Medicare/Medicaid certification, occupancy rate, and days of care provided.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for Employment for Health Care and Social Assistance: Nursing Care Facilities (NAICS 6231) in the United States (IPURN6231W010000000) from 1987 to 2024 about nursing homes, nursing, healthcare, social assistance, health, NAICS, IP, employment, and USA.
Facebook
TwitterCenters for Medicare & Medicaid Services - Nursing HomesThis feature layer, utilizing data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), displays the locations of nursing homes in the U.S. Nursing homes provide a type of residential care. They are a place of residence for people who require constant nursing care and have significant deficiencies with activities of daily living. Per CMS, "Nursing homes, which include Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) and Nursing Facilities (NFs), are required to be in compliance with Federal requirements to receive payment under the Medicare or Medicaid programs. The Secretary of the United States Department of Health & Human Services has delegated to the CMS and the State Medicaid Agency the authority to impose enforcement remedies against a nursing home that does not meet Federal requirements." This layer includes currently active nursing homes, including number of certified beds, address, and other information.Bridgepoint Sub-Acute and Rehab Capitol HillData downloaded: August 1, 2024Data source: Provider InformationData modification: This dataset includes only those facilities with addresses that were appropriately geocoded.For more information: Nursing homes including rehab servicesFor feedback, please contact: ArcGIScomNationalMaps@esri.comCenters for Medicare & Medicaid ServicesPer USA.gov, "The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) provides health coverage to more than 100 million people through Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and the Health Insurance Marketplace. The CMS seeks to strengthen and modernize the Nation’s health care system, to provide access to high quality care and improved health at lower costs."
Facebook
TwitterCenters for Medicare & Medicaid Services - Nursing HomesThis feature layer, utilizing data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), displays the locations of nursing homes in the U.S. Nursing homes provide a type of residential care. They are a place of residence for people who require constant nursing care and have significant deficiencies with activities of daily living. Per CMS, "Nursing homes, which include Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) and Nursing Facilities (NFs), are required to be in compliance with Federal requirements to receive payment under the Medicare or Medicaid programs. The Secretary of the United States Department of Health & Human Services has delegated to the CMS and the State Medicaid Agency the authority to impose enforcement remedies against a nursing home that does not meet Federal requirements." This layer includes currently active nursing homes, including number of certified beds, address, and other information.Bridgepoint Sub-Acute and Rehab Capitol HillData downloaded: August 1, 2024Data source: Provider InformationData modification: This dataset includes only those facilities with addresses that were appropriately geocoded.For more information: Nursing homes including rehab servicesFor feedback, please contact: ArcGIScomNationalMaps@esri.comCenters for Medicare & Medicaid ServicesPer USA.gov, "The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) provides health coverage to more than 100 million people through Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and the Health Insurance Marketplace. The CMS seeks to strengthen and modernize the Nation’s health care system, to provide access to high quality care and improved health at lower costs."
Facebook
TwitterIn 2024, the Hebrew Home For The Aged At Riverdale was the nursing home with the **** certified beds in the United States, according to CMS data. This non-profit nursing home, located in Riverdale, New York, had a total of *** certified beds as of May 2025. The second leading nursing home, in terms of certified bed number, was the for-profit Plaza Rehab and Nursing Center also in New York.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.nconemap.gov/pages/termshttps://www.nconemap.gov/pages/terms
A nursing home is commonly referred to as a skilled nursing facility, long term care (LTC) facility, or rest home, and may have a different standardized name throughout the United States, but is most commonly referred to as a nursing home. A nursing home traditionally offers 24-hour (skilled) nursing to the elderly or to disabled patients having a variety of medical conditions who require personal care services above that of an assisted living but do not require hospitalization. The personal care services provided may or may not include, but are not limited to: skilled nursing, long term inpatient care, room and board, meals, laundry, and assistance with: dressing, grooming, getting in and out of bed, medications, bathing, and toileting. For purposes of this dataset, an assisted living facility is defined as a facility where the elderly, who are not related to the operator, reside and receive care, treatment, or services. Although not at the level of a nursing home, the services are above the level of an independent living community. They may include several hours per week of supportive care, personal care, or nursing care per resident. Generally, an assisted living facility offers help in daily living (laundry, cooking, cleaning, etc.) and personal assistance (bathing, eating, clothing, etc.). Many assisted living facilities offer assistance with medication and a lesser level of nursing care than what is offered at a nursing home. Assisted living facilities may be regulated by size restrictions depending on which type of assisted living facility it is considered to be in the state in which it exists. For example, Adult Family Homes in Wisconsin have between 3-4 elderly residents while Community Based Residential Facilities have 5 or more. Almost every state has different terminology to describe their version of the assisted living facility system. The structures in which assisted living facilities exist are varied as well. Depending on the type, an assisted living facility may operate out of a personal residence or a nursing home style structure, and it may be set up as apartment style living or as a campus setting in a continuing care retirement community. Multiple assisted living facilities may exist at one location or may be co-located with nursing homes and/or other similar health care facilities. If a facility is licensed by a state and holds multiple licenses, it is represented once in this dataset for each license, even if the licenses are for the same location. This dataset does not include retirement communities, adult daycare facilities, or rehabilitation facilities. Nursing Homes that are operated by and co-located with a hospital are also excluded because the locations are included in the hospital dataset. Records with "-DOD" appended to the end of the [NAME] value are located on a military base, as defined by the Defense Installation Spatial Data Infrastructure (DISDI) military installations and military range boundaries. "#" and "*" characters were automatically removed from standard fields populated by TechniGraphics. Double spaces were replaced by single spaces in these same fields. Text fields in this dataset have been set to all upper case to facilitate consistent database engine search results. All diacritics (e.g., the German umlaut or the Spanish tilde) have been replaced with their closest equivalent English character to facilitate use with database systems that may not support diacritics. The currentness of this dataset is indicated by the [CONTDATE] field. Based on this field, the oldest record dates from 09/22/2009 and the newest record dates from 01/08/2010.
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Assisted Living Waiver (ALW) eligible individuals are those who are enrolled in Medi-Cal and meet the level of care provided in a nursing facility due to their medical needs. Individuals with Medi-Cal benefits that include a share of cost may not enroll in the ALW. This dataset contains the provider number, provider legal name, provider business name, capacity per provider enrollment, provider physical location, provider counties and provider phone number of facilities enrolled in the ALW program. Data as of 1/1/2023
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
United States CPI U: sa: Medical Care: Services: HR: Nursing Homes & Adult Daycare data was reported at 227.088 Dec1996=100 in Jun 2018. This records an increase from the previous number of 226.670 Dec1996=100 for May 2018. United States CPI U: sa: Medical Care: Services: HR: Nursing Homes & Adult Daycare data is updated monthly, averaging 161.695 Dec1996=100 from Jan 1997 (Median) to Jun 2018, with 258 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 227.088 Dec1996=100 in Jun 2018 and a record low of 100.600 Dec1996=100 in Jan 1997. United States CPI U: sa: Medical Care: Services: HR: Nursing Homes & Adult Daycare data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Bureau of Labor Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s USA – Table US.I006: Consumer Price Index: Urban: sa.
Facebook
TwitterThe CMS Program Statistics - Medicare Providers summary tables provide data on institutional (i.e., hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, home health agencies, hospices, etc.) and non-institutional (i.e., physicians, nonphysicians, specialists, and suppliers) providers.
For additional information on enrollment, providers, and Medicare use and payment, visit the CMS Program Statistics page.
These data do not exist in a machine-readable format, so the view data and API options are not available. Please use the download function to access the data.
Below is the list of tables:
MDCR PROVIDERS 1. Medicare Providers: Number of Medicare Certified Institutional Providers, Yearly Trend MDCR PROVIDERS 2. Medicare Providers: Number of Medicare Certified Inpatient Hospital and Skilled Nursing Facility Beds and Beds Per 1,000 Enrollees, Yearly Trend MDCR PROVIDERS 3. Medicare Providers: Number of Medicare Certified Facilities, by Type of Control, Yearly Trend MDCR PROVIDERS 4. Medicare Providers: Number of Skilled Nursing Facilities and Medicare Certified Hospitals, and Number of Beds, by State, Territories, Possessions and Other Areas MDCR PROVIDERS 5. Medicare Providers: Number of Medicare Certified Providers, by Type of Provider, by State, Territories, Possessions, and Other Areas MDCR PROVIDERS 6. Medicare Providers: Number of Medicare Non-Institutional Providers by Specialty, Yearly Trend MDCR PROVIDERS 7. Medicare Providers: Number of Medicare Non-Institutional Providers, by State, Territories, Possessions, and Other Areas, Yearly Trend
Facebook
TwitterIn 2020, there were a total of 7.3 million service users of long-term care (LTC) in the United States. The largest share of LTC users came from home health agencies, followed by hospice patients and nursing home residents. Although assisted living community providers accounted for the largest share of LTC providers, they only accounted for roughly 10 percent of all LTC users. The number of service users of LTC has mostly increased from 2012, reaching a peak of 9.5 million people in 2018. The large drop in numbers in 2020 is most likely due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Facebook
TwitterThe 2010 National Survey of Residential Care Facilities (NSRCF) is a first-ever national probability sample survey that collects data on U.S. residential care providers, their staffs and services, and the people they serve. It is designed to provide national estimates of the number of residential care facilities operating in the United States, the number of residents receiving care, and the characteristics of both the facilities and their residents. NSRCF was conducted between March and November 2010. All residential care facilities that participated in the survey were places that were licensed, registered, listed, certified, or otherwise regulated by the state and that had 4 or more licensed, certified, or registered beds, provided room and board with at least two meals a day, around-the-clock on-site supervision, and help with personal care such as bathing and dressing or health related services such as medication management. These facilities served a predominantly adult population and had at least one current resident. Facilities licensed to serve the mentally ill or the developmentally disabled populations exclusively were excluded from the survey.
Facebook
TwitterThe NCHS National Post-acute and Long-term Care Study (NPALS) collects data on post-acute and long-term care providers every two years. The goal is to monitor post-acute and long-term care settings with reliable, accurate, relevant, and timely statistical information to support and inform policy, research, and practice. These data tables provide an overview of the geographic, organizational, staffing, service provision, and user characteristics of paid, regulated long-term and post-acute care providers in the United States. The settings include adult day services centers, home health agencies, hospices, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, long-term care hospitals, and nursing homes.
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
United States CPI UW: Medical Care: Services: HR: Nursing Homes & Adult Daycare data was reported at 0.190 % in Jun 2018. This records a decrease from the previous number of 0.191 % for May 2018. United States CPI UW: Medical Care: Services: HR: Nursing Homes & Adult Daycare data is updated monthly, averaging 0.126 % from Jan 1998 (Median) to Jun 2018, with 246 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 0.196 % in Jul 2017 and a record low of 0.050 % in Jan 1998. United States CPI UW: Medical Care: Services: HR: Nursing Homes & Adult Daycare data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Bureau of Labor Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s USA – Table US.I010: Consumer Price Index: Urban: Weights.
Facebook
TwitterThe PA_Nursing_Homes layer contains the latitude and longitude coordinates of 689 nursing homes in Pennsylvania. When possible, efforts were made to confirm the rooftop location of each nursing home. The accuracy of geocoding is available in Geocoding Certainty attribute field (Geocoding Certainty: Rooftop="00", Street="01", Zip Centroid="04", Not geocoded="99"). Latitude and longitude are recorded in the WGS 1984 coordinate system in decimal degrees. The attribute data were obtained from an annual nursing home survey and include fields such as Facility ID numbers, longitude, latitude, facility name, street address, etc. Additional fields and data items could be potentially linked to this layer. For more information please visit https://www.statistics.health.pa.gov/HealthStatistics/HealthFacilities/NursingHomeReports/Pages/NursingHomeReports.aspxLast updated: 07/12/2022Contact Us: Pennsylvania Department of HealthDivision of Health InformaticsRA-DHICONTACTUS@pa.gov717-782-2448
Facebook
Twitterhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for Producer Price Index by Industry: Nursing Care Facilities (PCU6231162311) from Dec 2003 to Aug 2025 about nursing homes, nursing, PPI, industry, inflation, price index, indexes, price, and USA.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/6998/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/6998/terms
The National Nursing Home Survey (NNHS) is a survey of nursing homes and related care facilities in the United States. Between July and December 1995, information regarding facility and financial characteristics was gathered from 1,409 facilities, along with current resident information for 8,056 residents. For Part 1, Facility Questionnaire Data, personal interviews with facility administrators provided information on topics such as certification, availability of beds, and kinds of services provided, including dental, hospice, and nutrition. Through interviews with staff persons, current residents provided information on their age, race, marital status, level of care, and use of aids such as walkers, hearing aids, and crutches. These data are contained in Part 2, Current Resident Questionnaire Data. Financial data for facilities in Part 3, Expense Questionnaire Data, were supplied by accountants and bookkeepers using self-enumerated questionnaires pertaining to payroll expenses, drug costs, total revenues, and Medicare/Medicaid payments.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for All Employees, Skilled Nursing Care Facilities (CES6562310001) from Jan 1990 to Aug 2025 about nursing homes, nursing, health, establishment survey, education, services, employment, and USA.