State rate
9.08 /1k physicians
Serious actions per 1,000 physicians, 2021–2023
Physician Disciplinary Actions — 2021 to 2023
State rate
9.08 /1k physicians
Serious actions per 1,000 physicians, 2021–2023
National rank
#43
of 51 jurisdictions
Federal exclusions
4,393
Currently barred from Medicare and Medicaid (HHS OIG LEIE)
Each bar shows a category's share of New York's 4,393 federal exclusions, expressed as a ratio of the leading category. Descriptive only — exclusion categories are HHS OIG LEIE statutory designations, not measures of relative severity.
Source: HHS Office of Inspector General — List of Excluded Individuals and Entities (LEIE) + Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) Physician Discipline data New York physician disciplinary actions (2021-2023) + active OIG LEIE exclusions · 2024 OIG LEIE updated monthly; FSMB Physician Data Center publishes the consolidated state board action data. Disciplinary action rates normalize against active physician licensee counts at the state level.
Between 2021 and 2023, New York recorded 1,035 serious disciplinary actions against its 114,060 licensed physicians — a rate of 9.08 per 1,000, which ranks the state #43 of 51 nationally. That rate is 11% below the national average of 10.19. Separately, 4,393 individuals and entities tied to New York are currently excluded from Medicare, Medicaid, and all federal healthcare programs by the HHS Office of Inspector General — a separate, stricter sanction that overrides any state-level license status.
New York's discipline rate of 9.08 per 1,000 physicians falls below the national average of 10.19. This may reflect a less aggressive enforcement posture, different complaint volumes, or alternative remediation approaches used by the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct. Rate differences across states are driven less by physician behavior than by how each medical board resources investigations, what complaint volume they receive, and whether they favor public sanctions over confidential remediation. In New York, the most common federal exclusion category is Conviction: Program-Related Crime with 1,698 cases, followed by License Revocation or Suspension (1,136). Each category reflects a different regulatory pathway, and exclusions can persist even when a state license remains technically valid.
For patients in New York, the practical workflow is simple: verify the state license with the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct for current status and any public disciplinary orders, then cross-check the OIG LEIE at oig.hhs.gov for any federal exclusion flag. Both databases update on different cadences — state boards typically post new actions within weeks, while the LEIE is rebuilt monthly. A provider can be licensed in good standing at the state level yet still barred from federal programs, which is why both checks matter before choosing a physician, hiring a clinician, or authorizing a billing relationship.
4,393 individuals and entities in New York are currently excluded from Medicare, Medicaid, and all federal healthcare programs by the HHS Office of Inspector General.
| Name | Category | Exclusion Type | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 CLASS CAR INC | Other Business | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| BROADWAY RX ENTERPRISES, INC | Other Business | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| E-GREEN PHARMACY, INC | Other Business | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| EMPIRE TRANS NY INC | Other Business | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| MEDITRANS NY INC | Other Business | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| SA & SB ENTERPRISES, INC | Other Business | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| TRISTATE EXPRESS NY, INC | Other Business | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| SHAMIZA ALLY | Business Owner/Executive | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| MORDECHAI F BAR | Physician | Conviction: Controlled Substance | 2026-01-20 |
| CARLO ELOMINA GARCIA | Licensed Healthcare Professional | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| FARHAN C KHAN | Business Owner/Executive | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| MUHAMMAD USMAN KHAN | Healthcare Employee | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| MUHAMMAD RIZWAN KHAN | Healthcare Employee | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| FLORENCE MUI | Licensed Healthcare Professional | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
| NELLY P PETROSYAN | Business Owner/Executive | Conviction: Program-Related Crime | 2026-01-20 |
Source: HHS OIG LEIE. Showing most recent exclusions. Total excluded in New York: 4,393.
To verify a physician's current license status, check for disciplinary history, or file a complaint, contact the board directly.
New York's discipline rate of 9.08 per 1,000 physicians falls below the national average of 10.19. This may reflect a less aggressive enforcement posture, different complaint volumes, or alternative remediation approaches used by the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct.
Between 2021 and 2023, New York recorded 1,035 serious disciplinary actions across 114,060 licensed physicians. "Serious" actions include revocations, surrenders, suspensions, probation, and restrictions — excluding minor sanctions like letters of reprimand when used as standalone penalties.
If you believe a physician has acted unprofessionally or provided substandard care, you can file a complaint with the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct. The process typically involves:
You can also contact the board by phone at (518) 402-0855 for guidance on the complaint process.
New York ranks #43 out of 51 states, placing it among the lowest in physician discipline enforcement. With a rate of 9.08 per 1,000 physicians, New York's rate is 11% below the national average of 10.19. A lower rate could reflect fewer complaints, preference for confidential remediation, or different regulatory priorities.
To verify a doctor's license in New York, visit the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct website at https://www.health.ny.gov/professionals/doctors/conduct/. Most state boards offer a free online physician lookup tool where you can search by name or license number. The results typically show current license status, any disciplinary actions, and board orders. For multi-state verification, use the FSMB's DocInfo service (docinfo.org), which aggregates records from all state boards. The National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB) also allows patients to request their own physician's records through a self-query process.
When a physician is disciplined in New York, the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct can impose sanctions ranging from a letter of concern (least severe) to full license revocation. Common actions include probation (practicing under restrictions), suspension (temporary loss of license), fines, and required continuing education. The action becomes part of the physician's public record and is reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank. Depending on the severity, the physician may continue practicing under conditions, or may be permanently barred from medicine in New York. Patients can verify any physician's current status through the board's license lookup tool.
Federal exclusion means a healthcare provider is barred from participating in Medicare, Medicaid, and all federal healthcare programs. The HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) maintains the List of Excluded Individuals/Entities (LEIE). In New York, 4,393 individuals and entities are currently excluded. Exclusion can result from criminal convictions related to healthcare fraud, patient abuse, felony controlled substance violations, or certain licensing board actions. Hiring or billing through an excluded provider can result in civil monetary penalties for healthcare organizations.
The physician discipline process in New York typically takes 6 to 24 months from initial complaint to final board action. After the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct receives a complaint, it conducts a preliminary review (1-3 months), followed by a formal investigation if warranted (3-12 months). If the board finds sufficient evidence of a violation, it may offer a consent agreement or proceed to a formal hearing. Emergency suspensions can occur immediately when patient safety is at imminent risk. Throughout the process, complaint details are generally confidential until a final public action is taken.
In New York, final disciplinary actions taken by the New York State Board for Professional Medical Conduct are public record and can be accessed through the board's online license verification system. This includes revocations, suspensions, probation orders, and formal reprimands. However, complaints under investigation, dismissed complaints, and informal remediation (like confidential letters of concern) are generally not publicly disclosed. Federal exclusions are always public through the OIG LEIE database. The National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB) maintains comprehensive records but limits direct public access — patients can request their own provider's records through a self-query.
Guides to help you navigate physician discipline data and protect yourself as a patient
Free tools and step-by-step process for verifying physician background and disciplinary history.
Understand the difference between revocations, suspensions, probation, and other sanctions.
The complaint process, investigation timeline, and what triggers board action.
Explore related public data about healthcare providers, hospitals, safety, and worker protections
CMS provider data — 7M+ physicians, specialties, and practice locations nationwide
Hospital quality ratings, patient experience scores, and infection rate data
OSHA workplace safety inspections, violations, and employer penalty data
Workplace injury, illness, and fatality data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.