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Dedicated Health Care Provider in Idaho
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Idaho
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Explore national- and state-level data for hundreds of health, environmental and socioeconomic measures, including background information about each measure. Use features on this page to find measures; view subpopulations, trends and rankings; and download and share content.

Idaho Value:

80.9 %

Percentage of adults who reported having a personal doctor or health care provider

Idaho Rank:

40

Value and rank based on data from 2024

Dedicated Health Care Provider in depth:

Additional Measures:

Dedicated Health Care Provider - Age 65+
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Dedicated Health Care Provider - Women
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Explore Population Data:

Appears In:

Annual Report
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Dedicated Health Care Provider by State

Percentage of adults who reported having a personal doctor or health care provider

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Dedicated Health Care Provider in

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Data from U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 2024

91.0% - 87.4%

87.3% - 85.5%

85.4% - 83.1%

83.0% - 81.0%

80.9% - 71.0%

No Data

• Data Unavailable
Top StatesRankValue
New Hampshire
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191.0 %
Maine
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290.8 %
Vermont
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390.2 %
Your StateRankValue
Iowa
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Nebraska
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3881.1 %
Idaho
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4080.9 %
California
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4179.7 %
Bottom StatesRankValue
Texas
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Wyoming
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4676.0 %
Nevada
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4873.2 %
New Mexico
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4971.0 %

Dedicated Health Care Provider

New Hampshire
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191.0 %
Maine
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290.8 %
Vermont
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390.2 %
Massachusetts
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489.7 %
Maryland
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588.8 %
Michigan
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688.4 %
Connecticut
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788.2 %
Ohio
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888.0 %
Pennsylvania
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987.5 %
Rhode Island
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987.5 %
Hawaii
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1187.3 %
Indiana
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1287.0 %
Arkansas
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1386.9 %
Louisiana
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1486.8 %
West Virginia
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1586.7 %
New York
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1686.5 %
Delaware
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1786.3 %
Kentucky
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1885.9 %
Virginia
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1985.5 %
Alabama
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2085.4 %
New Jersey
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2184.8 %
North Dakota
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2284.2 %
Oregon
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2383.9 %
South Carolina
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2383.9 %
Wisconsin
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2383.9 %
Georgia
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2683.7 %
Missouri
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2683.7 %
Washington
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2883.6 %
Minnesota
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2983.2 %
Mississippi
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3083.0 %
Oklahoma
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3182.9 %
Kansas
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3282.7 %
Illinois
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3382.6 %
North Carolina
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3482.4 %
Florida
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3582.3 %
South Dakota
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3681.8 %
Colorado
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3781.2 %
Iowa
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3881.1 %
Nebraska
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3881.1 %
Idaho
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4080.9 %
California
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4179.7 %
Arizona
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4279.5 %
Utah
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4379.4 %
Montana
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4479.3 %
Alaska
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4578.3 %
Texas
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4676.0 %
Wyoming
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4676.0 %
Nevada
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4873.2 %
New Mexico
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4971.0 %
United States
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•83.9 %
District of Columbia
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•87.1 %
Tennessee
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[3]
••
• Data Unavailable
[3] Data is missing in the source files
Source:
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 2024

Dedicated Health Care Provider Trends

Percentage of adults who reported having a personal doctor or health care provider

Compare States
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About Dedicated Health Care Provider

US Value: 83.9 %

Top State(s): New Hampshire: 91.0 %

Bottom State(s): New Mexico: 71.0 %

Definition: Percentage of adults who reported having a personal doctor or health care provider

Data Source and Years(s): U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 2024

Suggested Citation: America's Health Rankings analysis of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, United Health Foundation, AmericasHealthRankings.org, accessed 2026.

Individuals with a dedicated health care provider are better positioned to receive care that can prevent, detect and manage illness and injury. Having a regular health care provider helps the patient and provider build a stable, long-term relationship that is associated with several benefits, including:

  • Appropriate preventive care.
  • Lower health care costs.
  • Better overall health status.
  • Fewer emergency room visits for non-urgent or avoidable problems.
  • Improvements in chronic care management for asthma, hypertension and diabetes.

According to America’s Health Rankings analysis, the prevalence of having a dedicated healthcare provider is higher among: 

  • Women compared with men. 
  • Adults age 65 and older compared with adults ages 18-44.
  • Non-Hispanic white and Black adults compared with Hispanic adults. Hispanic adults have a significantly lower prevalence of having a dedicated healthcare provider than all other racial and ethnic groups.
  • College graduates, compared with those with lower levels of education. The prevalence increases significantly with each higher level of education.
  • Adults with an annual household income of $150,000 or more compared with those with lower levels of income; the prevalence is significantly higher with each increase in income level.
  • Adults who have difficulty with mobility or difficulty with self-care compared with adults without a disability.
  • Straight adults compared with lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer (LGBQ+) adults.
  • Adults who have served in the U.S. armed forces compared to adults who have not served.

Strategies for increasing the percentage of adults with a dedicated health care provider include:

  • Enacting scope-of-practice laws that enable nurse practitioners to perform more primary care functions. Scope-of-practice laws lead to increases in the number of nurse practitioners per capita and higher annual growth in the nurse practitioner workforce. 
  • Reorienting health care systems to encourage patients to use primary care for new symptoms instead of seeking specialists with low-impact and high-cost procedures, which will also encourage capital investment in primary care.
  • Reducing barriers to care such as lack of health insurance, high cost of care and poor geographic availability of services.

Healthy People 2030 has an objective to increase the proportion of individuals with a usual primary care provider.

Friedberg, Mark W., Peter S. Hussey, and Eric C. Schneider. “Primary Care: A Critical Review Of The Evidence On Quality And Costs Of Health Care.” Health Affairs 29, no. 5 (May 1, 2010): 766–72. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2010.0025.

Kominski, Gerald F., Narissa J. Nonzee, and Andrea Sorensen. “The Affordable Care Act’s Impacts on Access to Insurance and Health Care for Low-Income Populations.” Annual Review of Public Health 38, no. 1 (March 20, 2017): 489–505. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-031816-044555.

Winters, Paul, Daniel Tancredi, and Kevin Fiscella. “The Role of Usual Source of Care in Cholesterol Treatment.” Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine 23, no. 2 (March 1, 2010): 179–85. https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.2010.02.090084.

Xue, Ying, Zhiqiu Ye, Carol Brewer, and Joanne Spetz. “Impact of State Nurse Practitioner Scope-of-Practice Regulation on Health Care Delivery: Systematic Review.” Nursing Outlook 64, no. 1 (January 2016): 71–85.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.outlook.2015.08.005.

Related Measures

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Dental Care Providers
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Dental Visit
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High Health Status
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Mental Health Providers
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Primary Care Providers
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Public Health Funding
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Uninsured
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