Data sets may have been wiped from federal government sites, but these folks have you covered

The Journalist's Resource has curated a list of important health-related data collections; find them in As the US government removes health websites and data, here’s a list of non-government data alternatives and archives.


Harvard dataverse

is a free data repository open to all researchers from any discipline, both inside and outside of the Harvard community, where you can share, archive, cite, access, and explore research data. Each individual Dataverse collection is a customizable collection of datasets (or a virtual repository) for organizing, managing, and showcasing datasets. (Source)


Congressional District Health Dashboard

Congressional District Health Dashboard provides measures of health and its drivers at the congressional district level, showing how each district is doing on health outcomes, social and economic factors and other measures. The Dashboard was created at the Department of Population Health at NYU Grossman School of Medicine with the support of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The group also manages the City Health Dashboard. (Source)


Rural Hospital Data


CDC datasets uploaded before January 28th, 2025


Public Environmental Data Partners

The Public Environmental Data Partners are committed to preserving and providing public access to federal environmental data. We are a volunteer coalition of several environmental, justice, and policy organizations, researchers across several universities, archivists, and students who rely on federal datasets and tools to support critical research, advocacy, policy, and litigation work. To gather insights on what data to preserve, we reached out to our networks, which consist largely of environmental justice groups and networks, state and local government climate offices, and academic researchers. We compiled a large list of federal databases and tools, and prioritized them based on their relative impact, our confidence that we could archive them, and the relative effort it would take to obtain and archive them.