State healthcare shortage profile

Pennsylvania Healthcare Shortage Areas

392 active HRSA Health Professional Shortage Area designations and 156 Medically Underserved Areas across Pennsylvania.

Total HPSAs
392
Primary care
125
Mental health
124
Dental
143
Medically Underserved Areas
156
Residents in Geographic Shortage Areas
1,149,526
% Residents in Geographic Shortage
8.7%

HRSA Counties Indexed

68

with HPSA / MUA coverage

Discipline Mix

125 / 124 / 143 PC/MH/D

Primary care · Mental health · Dental

Data Source

HRSA

Bureau of Health Workforce — HPSA Find

Reporting Year

2024

HRSA quarterly snapshot

% Residents in Geographic Shortage-Designated Counties 8.7%

Pennsylvania Shortage Designations by Care Type

How Pennsylvania's 392 active HRSA designations split across the three provider categories. Pennsylvania has adopted ACA Medicaid expansion, which broadens coverage but does not change provider-supply shortages.

Pennsylvania HPSA designations by type

Active Health Professional Shortage Area designations, by provider category.

designations
Source HRSA Data Warehouse — designated HPSAs As of 2025

Counties in Pennsylvania

County Primary Care Mental Health
Adams 1 1
Allegheny 1 1
Armstrong 1 1
Beaver 1 1
Bedford 1 1
Berks 1 1
Blair 1 1
Bradford 1 1
Bucks 0 1
Butler 1 0
Cambria 1 1
Cameron 1 1
Carbon 1 1
Centre 1 1
Chautauqua 1 1
Chester 1 1
Clarion 1 1
Clearfield 1 1
Clinton 1 1
Columbia 1 1
Crawford 1 1
Cumberland 1 1
Dauphin 1 1
Delaware 1 1
Elk 1 1
Erie 1 1
Fayette 1 1
Forest 1 1
Franklin 1 1
Fulton 1 1
Huntingdon 1 1
Indiana 1 1
Jefferson 1 1
Juniata 1 1
Lackawanna 1 1
Lancaster 1 1
Lawrence 1 0
Lebanon 1 0
Lehigh 1 1
Luzerne 1 1
Lycoming 1 1
McKean 1 1
Mercer 1 1
Mifflin 1 1
Monroe 1 1
Montgomery 1 1
Montour 1 1
Northampton 1 0
Northumberland 1 1
Perry 1 0
Philadelphia 1 1
Pike 1 1
Potter 1 1
Schuylkill 1 1
Snyder 1 1
Somerset 1 1
Steuben 1 1
Sullivan 1 1
Susquehanna 1 1
Tioga 1 1
Union 1 1
Venango 1 1
Warren 1 1
Washington 1 1
Wayne 1 1
Westmoreland 1 1
Wyoming 1 1
York 1 1

Medically Underserved Areas in Pennsylvania

Showing 30 of 156 MUA designations (lowest MUA Index first, i.e. most underserved).

Name MUA Index
Med Ind - Warminster 0.0
Houtzdale Service Area 0.0
Burnside Service Area 0.0
Aleppo Service Area 0.0
Central Altoona Service Area 0.0
Clearfield Service Area 38.8
Morris Service Area 42.6
West Park/Market Service Area 43.3
Mantua/University City Service Area 43.3
Luzerne Service Area 44.0
Migrant Farmworker Population 44.7
Low Inc - Hill District Service Area 44.9
Allegheny Service Area 45.4
Low Inc - Belzhoover 45.4
Damascus Service Area 46.5
Allegheny Service Area 46.7
Fulton Service Area 49.5
Low Inc - Slickville Service Area 50.5
Woodland Service Area 50.7
Allegheny Service Area 50.7
Morris Service Area 51.0
Aliquippa Service Area 51.0
Eaton Service Area 51.1
Low Inc - Chambersburg Service Area 51.3
Chapman Service Area 51.3
Forest County 51.4
Low Inc - Southeast Lancaster Service Area 51.6
Allentown Service Area 51.6
Allegheny Service Area 51.8
Clearfield Service Area 52.2

What the HRSA Data Shows for Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania currently carries 392 active Health Professional Shortage Area designations in the HRSA Data Warehouse, split across 125 primary-care HPSAs, 124 mental-health HPSAs, and 143 dental HPSAs. Roughly 8.7% of the state's population — about 1,149,526 residents — lives in a county that HRSA has designated as a geographic (whole-community) shortage area. Population-group and facility designations (rural health clinics, FQHCs, low-income groups) cover additional residents and are counted separately, since a single county can hold several designation types without their service populations overlapping cleanly.

Beyond the HPSA counts, Pennsylvania shows 156 Medically Underserved Areas, a separate HRSA classification that weights four population-level factors: the primary-care provider ratio, the infant mortality rate, the percent of residents below poverty, and the percent of residents aged 65 and over. Counties can appear on the HPSA list, the MUA list, or both — the designations serve different federal-program eligibility purposes. The 68 counties listed above show where these shortages land geographically inside Pennsylvania, with mental-health gaps typically running the highest in severity scores because HRSA's mental-health provider-to-population ratio threshold (30,000:1) is roughly ten times wider than primary care (3,500:1).

These designations are the gating criterion for more than thirty federal programs that target underserved communities in Pennsylvania: National Health Service Corps scholarships and loan-repayment awards (up to $50,000 per year), Community Health Center (FQHC) operating grants, a 10% Medicare bonus for physicians practicing inside a HPSA, Rural Health Clinic certification, and J-1 visa waivers for international medical graduates who commit to serving in designated areas. HRSA reviews designations quarterly, so the counts shown above shift as new areas qualify and previously designated areas fall off. The data here describes the structural supply of providers only; it does not evaluate the quality of care offered or substitute for medical advice, and residents seeking a specific appointment should contact a provider directly or use their insurance network.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are there doctor shortages in Pennsylvania?
Yes. Pennsylvania has 392 Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs), including 125 in primary care, 124 in mental health, and 143 in dental care. About 8.7% of Pennsylvania residents live in a county that HRSA has designated as a geographic (whole-community) shortage area; additional residents are covered by population-group and facility designations counted separately.
What are HPSAs?
Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs) are federal designations by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) identifying communities with insufficient healthcare providers. HPSAs are categorized into three types: primary care, mental health, and dental. In Pennsylvania, there are 392 designated HPSAs and 156 Medically Underserved Areas (MUAs).
How many Medically Underserved Areas are in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania has 156 Medically Underserved Areas (MUAs). About 1,149,526 residents (8.7% of the state) live in a county with a geographic HRSA shortage designation. MUA-designated areas qualify for enhanced federal funding and Community Health Center grants.
What federal programs address healthcare shortages in Pennsylvania?
HRSA shortage designations in Pennsylvania unlock eligibility for over 30 federal programs, including National Health Service Corps (NHSC) loan repayment and scholarships, Community Health Center (FQHC) funding, Medicare bonus payments (10% for physicians in HPSAs), J-1 visa waiver programs for international medical graduates, and Rural Health Clinic certification. These programs direct billions of dollars annually toward underserved communities.
How does Pennsylvania compare to other states in healthcare access?
Pennsylvania has 392 total HPSA designations and 156 Medically Underserved Areas. With 8.7% of residents in counties carrying a geographic shortage designation, you can compare this to other states on our national shortage rankings pages for primary care, mental health, and dental care.
How often is Pennsylvania HPSA data updated?
HRSA reviews and updates HPSA designations quarterly. New designations and score changes are published through the HRSA Data Warehouse. PlainHealthAccess refreshes its data regularly to reflect the latest HRSA releases.

Source: HRSA Data Warehouse HRSA Data Warehouse Not affiliated with HRSA

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