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HRSA HPSA

HRSA Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSA)

U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration · Tier-1 · research-only (never on individual profiles)

Research-only
Source:HRSA HPSA·Snapshot May 2026Open official source ↗

HRSA Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) designations identify geographic areas, populations, and facilities where specific provider types (Primary Care, Dental Health, Mental Health) are in critical shortage. Used by federal programs to direct workforce-incentive funding and loan-repayment programs.

What Fonteum uses it for

How this source shows up on Fonteum.

Tier-1 research-only context for /research pages discussing healthcare access. HRSA HPSA designations cover Primary Care + Dental + Mental Health only; they do NOT cover dermatology, chiropractic, or specialty care.

What this source does NOT mean

HPSA designations describe shortage *areas*, not individual provider quality. They do not score, rate, or rank providers. State-level aggregates of HPSA scores are research context, not a quality measurement.

What this dataset answers

Research and data questions this source supports.

  • 01Identify Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs) for a given county or ZIP code to support research on provider access gaps.
  • 02Filter provider directories to include or exclude HPSAs as a signal for underserved market prioritization.
  • 03Build a workforce deployment analysis that maps HPSA designations against NPPES provider density to quantify shortage severity.
  • 04Support grant applications and community health needs assessments that require HPSA designation evidence.
  • 05Power a geographic access equity study combining HPSA data with population denominators from the Census state population dataset.

Dataset size: ~7,300 active HPSA designations (quarterly snapshot)

Limitations

What we can’t infer from this source.

  • HPSA covers Primary Care + Dental Health + Mental Health only. Dermatology / chiropractic / specialty care are NOT eligible HPSA disciplines.
  • HPSA score is a federal-program eligibility threshold, not a quality measurement.
  • Tier-1 — never rendered on individual provider profiles.
Source metadata

Authority, license, refresh cadence.

Authority

U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration

Tier

Tier-1 · research-only (never on individual profiles)

Refresh cadence

HRSA updates HPSA designations continuously; Fonteum re-pulls on snapshot publication.

License

U.S. government public-domain data. Free to use with attribution.

Official URL

https://data.hrsa.gov/topics/health-workforce/shortage-areas

Attribution requirement

Source: HRSA HPSA · Snapshot {YYYY-MM-DD}

ToS & usage notes

What the source allows.

U.S. government public-domain works. HRSA publishes shortage-area designations with no redistribution restrictions; attribution to HRSA is the only requirement. The data feeds Fonteum's research context — never per-provider profile rendering.

Sample provenance

What a single field looks like in the graph.

A worked example. Every field surfaced from this source carries this shape of provenance line — source · last checked · display rule · confidence (when applicable).

Field

Primary-care HPSA designation rate (state-level research context)

Sample value

California: 19.4% of population in a Primary Care HPSA

Provenance line

Source: HRSA HPSA · Snapshot 2026-04-01 · Display rule: research-only — appears in /research methodology + commentary, never on profiles

How to access

Official API, bulk download, and Fonteum endpoints.

Official API / download

https://data.hrsa.gov/api/search/datafile?filename=BCD_HPSA_FCT_DET_APC.csv ↗

Bulk download

https://data.hrsa.gov/topics/health-workforce/shortage-areas ↗

Fonteum surface

https://fonteum.com/tools/access-gap →

Frequently asked

Common questions about HRSA HPSA.

What is a Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA)?
A Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) is a federal designation by HRSA (Health Resources and Services Administration) indicating that an area, population, or facility has an insufficient number of healthcare providers relative to need. HPSA designations apply to primary care, dental care, and mental health care. Federal programs including the National Health Service Corps (NHSC) loan repayment, J-1 visa waiver, and Medicare bonus payments use HPSA designation as eligibility criteria.
How do I look up HPSA designations for a specific area?
HRSA publishes the full HPSA designation file at data.hrsa.gov/topics/health-workforce/shortage-areas. The dataset is available as a bulk CSV download and covers all active, withdrawn, and proposed HPSA designations. Fonteum surfaces HPSA designations on provider search results using FIPS county codes as the join key.
What are the types of HPSA designations?
HRSA designates three types of HPSAs: Geographic HPSAs (entire areas — typically whole counties or rational service areas), Population HPSAs (specific population groups within an area, such as Medicaid enrollees or migrant workers), and Facility HPSAs (specific facilities such as federally qualified health centers or correctional facilities). Each type has different designation criteria based on provider-to-population ratios and access barriers.
How are HPSA shortage scores calculated?
HPSA shortage scores (0–25 for primary care and mental health; 0–26 for dental) reflect the severity of the shortage. Scores are calculated from the provider-to-population ratio, percent of population below 100% of the federal poverty level, and distance to the nearest non-shortage source of care. Higher scores indicate greater shortage severity and higher priority for federal program resources.
Does a HPSA designation mean patients in that area cannot get care?
A HPSA designation means the area or population has an insufficient number of providers relative to the federal threshold — not that care is unavailable. Patients in HPSAs typically face longer wait times, higher out-of-pocket costs, or longer travel distances than patients in non-shortage areas. The designation is an administrative threshold, not a binary access indicator.
Related

Where this source already shows up.

Related sources in the graph

  • /sources/nppes →
  • /sources/hrsa-uds →
  • /sources/census-state-pop →
See also
  • /sources → The full source library — every dataset Fonteum cites.
  • /data-provenance → The provider graph — pipeline diagram, source-family clusters, field-level provenance examples, display rules.
  • /methodology → Network-wide sourcing, refresh cadence, and corrections policy.
  • /editorial-policy → Independence, sourcing, conflicts, corrections, retractions.

The substrate, by the numbers

9.2Mgraph entitiesProviders, organizations, owners, and facilities
15.7Mlinked identifiersNPIs, CCNs, LEIs and more, resolved to entities
5Mgraph edgesSource-attested relationships between entities
44federal source familiesDistinct CMS, OIG, HRSA, FDA and peer datasets
35dataset pagesCitable, downloadable /data catalog pages
61reproducible studiesEach shipping the SQL behind its figures

Built on the authoritative federal record

The primary sources, named on every page.

These are the federal agencies whose public datasets Fonteum ingests and attributes — the issuing authorities, not customers or partners. Every figure on the site links back to one of them.

  • CMS
  • HHS-OIG
  • HRSA
  • FDA
  • NLM
  • NUCC
  • Census
  • BLS
  • BEA

See the full source registry, with license and refresh cadence for each →

Reproducible by design

Every figure traces to its federal source.

14-tuple provenance

Every rendered fact ties to a source URL, dataset ID, snapshot date, row key, and SHA-256 — the full chain-of-custody record.

Reproducible SQL

Each study ships the exact query behind its figures, run against the cited federal snapshot. Re-run it yourself.

Daily reconciliation

Published counts are reconciled against the upstream federal datasets on a daily cadence, with drift logged.

Named medical review

Reviewed by Jennifer Montecillo, MD, medical reviewer. Non-practicing medical reviewer.

Read the full provenance and attestation methodology →

Two doors

Use the free API and open data

Query providers, facilities, sanctions, and quality scores — each field carrying its federal source. Self-serve, no call to start.

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Reviewed by Jennifer Montecillo, MD, medical reviewer. Non-practicing medical reviewer.

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