Home / Compare / Comparison

Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse vs Registered Nurse

Side-by-side comparison of provider counts, geographic distribution, and per-capita density across U.S. states.

This page compares two distinct NUCC-taxonomy specialties tracked by the CMS National Plan and Provider Enumeration System: Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse, which currently counts 2,788 enrolled providers across 52 U.S. states and territories, and Registered Nurse, with 177,204 providers across 56 states. Each clinician on these rosters selected a primary NUCC code at NPI enrollment, so the totals measure how many providers self-identify their primary practice as Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse or Registered Nurse rather than the total population ever trained or credentialed in either field — dual-certified clinicians show up under whichever code they registered first.

On national volume, Registered Nurse carries the larger provider roster (177,204 vs 2,788), and Registered Nurse has the wider geographic footprint at 56 states versus 52. The top Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse concentration sits in Ohio (454 providers), while Registered Nurse peaks in New York (27,515). The per-capita columns in the table below normalize each state's raw count against 2023 Census population estimates, which matters because absolute provider counts track population scale first and specialty density second — a small state with a strong training pipeline can out-rank a larger state on per-100K availability.

Use this comparison to understand relative availability, not to judge clinical substitutability — Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse and Registered Nurse are distinct specialties with different scopes of practice, training requirements, and conditions they treat, even when their NUCC categories overlap. Important: PlainDoctor is a directory of publicly available CMS government data, not medical advice, a provider rating, or a recommendation about which specialty a patient should consult. Always work with a licensed clinician to determine which specialty is appropriate for your condition, verify any specific provider through the NPPES NPI Registry and the relevant state medical board, and consult the NUCC taxonomy documentation for the formal scope-of-practice definitions behind each specialty code.

Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse

Category: Registered Nurse

2,788
Providers
52
States
View specialty →

Registered Nurse

177,204
Providers
56
States
View specialty →

Top 5 States — Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse

Ohio 454
New York 354
Wisconsin 257
California 156
Massachusetts 143

Top 5 States — Registered Nurse

New York 27,515
California 15,601
Ohio 10,883
Texas 10,675
Washington 6,791

Geographic Comparison

State Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse Registered Nurse
New York 354 27,515
California 156 15,601
Ohio 454 10,883
Texas 19 10,675
Washington 132 6,791
Pennsylvania 90 6,647
Florida 45 6,282
Michigan 99 6,153
Massachusetts 143 6,101
Wisconsin 257 5,086
Colorado 45 5,286
Tennessee 13 4,722
Georgia 68 3,972
Illinois 70 3,828
Arizona 32 3,865
Minnesota 21 3,814
North Carolina 60 3,202
Maryland 60 3,030
Oregon 69 2,891
Indiana 16 2,492
Missouri 33 2,255
New Jersey 69 2,173
Virginia 33 2,167
South Carolina 26 2,158
Alabama 4 2,003
Oklahoma 24 1,781
New Mexico 46 1,714
Nevada 15 1,545
Kansas 4 1,486
Kentucky 40 1,392
Alaska 62 1,316
Arkansas 3 1,329
Connecticut 10 1,262
Delaware 11 1,237
Louisiana 37 1,194
Utah 21 1,173
Nebraska 9 1,132
West Virginia 3 1,096
Hawaii 4 987
Rhode Island 21 950
Iowa 6 924
North Dakota 4 897
South Dakota 1 814
District of Columbia 8 786
Mississippi 14 755
Maine 37 719
Montana 1 568
Idaho 1 548
New Hampshire 9 539
Wyoming 5 402
Vermont 7 241

Summary

Registered Nurse has more registered providers nationally (177,204 vs 2,788). Registered Nurse has broader geographic coverage across 56 states.

Dive deeper into either specialty, or pivot to a different comparison — all rosters drawn from the CMS NPPES registry and NUCC taxonomy.

See all Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse providers in Ohio →

FAQ

How many Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse providers are there vs Registered Nurse?
There are 2,788 Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Registered Nurse providers and 177,204 Registered Nurse providers registered in the CMS NPPES directory.
Which specialty has broader geographic coverage?
Registered Nurse has broader coverage with 56 states vs 52 states.
Where is the data from?
Provider counts are from the CMS National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES). Per-capita rates use 2023 Census population estimates.

Provider data from CMS NPPES (download.cms.gov/nppes); specialty classifications from the NUCC Health Care Provider Taxonomy; each clinician identified by NPI. Per-capita rates use 2023 Census population estimates. PlainDoctor does not rate or recommend providers. Methodology · About.