The Physician and Physician Practice Research Database (3P-RD) captures characteristics of physicians and physician practices in 13 states. The database describes the supply of physician services available across selected states for data year 2019-2020.
The Medicare Physician & Other Practitioners by Provider dataset provides information on use, payments, submitted charges and beneficiary demographic and health characteristics organized by National Provider Identifier (NPI). Note: This full dataset contains more records than most spreadsheet programs can handle, which will result in an incomplete load of data. Use of a database or statistical software is required.
This data package contains the Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS), Performance Rates for Individual Eligible Professionals (EP) PQRS, Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) and Group Practice.
Facilitate marketing campaigns with the healthcare email list from Infotanks Media, including doctors, healthcare professionals, NPI numbers, physician specialties, and more. Buy targeted email lists of healthcare professionals and connect with doctors, specialists, and other healthcare professionals to promote your products and services. Hyper personalize campaigns to increase engagement for better chances of conversion. Reach out to our data experts today! Access 1.2 million physician contact database with 150+ specialties, including chiropractors, cardiologists, psychiatrists, and radiologists, among others. Get ready to integrate healthcare email lists from Infotanks Media to start email marketing campaigns through CRM and ESP. Contact us right now! Ensure guaranteed lead generation with segmented email marketing strategies for specialists, departments, and more. Make the best use of target marketing to progress and move closer to your business goals with email listing services for healthcare professionals. Infotanks Media provides 100% verified healthcare email lists with the highest email deliverability guarantee of 95%. Get a custom quote today as per your requirements. Enhance your marketing campaigns with healthcare email lists from 170+ countries to build your global outreach. Request your free sample today! Personalize your business communication and interactions to maximize conversion rates with high-quality contact data. Grow your business network in your target markets from anywhere globally with a guaranteed 95% contact accuracy of the healthcare email lists from Infotanks Media. Contact data experts at Infotanks Media from the healthcare industry to get a quick sample for free. Please write to us or call today!
Hyper target within and outside your desired markets with GDPR and CAN-SPAM compliant healthcare email lists that get integrated into your CRM and ESPs. Balance out the sales and marketing efforts by aligning goals using email lists from the healthcare industry. Build strong business relationships with potential clients through personalized campaigns. Call Infotanks Media for a free consultation. Explore new geographies and target markets with a focused approach using healthcare email lists. Align your sales teams and marketing teams through personalized email marketing campaigns to ensure they accomplish business goals together. Add value and grow revenue to take your business to the next level of success. Double up your business and revenue growth with email lists of healthcare professionals. Send segmented campaigns to monitor behaviors and understand the purchasing habits of your potential clients. Send follow-up nurturing email marketing campaigns to attract your potential clients to become converted customers. Close deals sooner with detailed information of your prospects using the healthcare email list from Infotanks Media. Reach healthcare professionals on their preferred platform of communication with the email list of healthcare professionals. Identify, capture, explore, and grow in your target markets anywhere globally with a fully verified, validated, and compliant email database of healthcare professionals. Move beyond the traditional approach and automate sales cycles with buying triggers sent through email marketing campaigns. Use the healthcare email list from Infotanks Media to engage with your targeted potential clients and get them to respond. Increase email marketing campaign response rate to convert better! Reach out to Infotanks Media to customize your healthcare email lists. Call today!
ONC uses the SK&A Office-based Provider Database to calculate the counts of medical doctors, doctors of osteopathy, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants at the state and count level from 2011 through 2013. These counts are grouped as a total, as well as segmented by each provider type and separately as counts of primary care providers.
Comprehensive database of physician contact information across all medical specialties in the United States
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Comprehensive physician salary data covering 75+ medical specialties with 2,500+ verified submissions from practicing physicians, residents, and medical students.
ONC uses the SK&A Office-based Provider Database to calculate the counts of medical doctors, doctors of osteopathy, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants at the state and count level from 2011 through 2013. These counts are grouped as a total, as well as segmented by each provider type and separately as counts of primary care providers.
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The physician credentialing services market is experiencing robust growth, driven by increasing healthcare regulations, the rising number of healthcare providers, and the expanding demand for efficient and streamlined credentialing processes. The market size in 2025 is estimated at $2.5 billion, exhibiting a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 5% from 2025 to 2033. This growth is fueled by several key trends, including the increasing adoption of technology solutions such as CAQH databases and cloud-based credentialing platforms to automate and accelerate the process. Furthermore, the rising focus on reducing administrative burdens for healthcare providers and improving patient access to care is significantly contributing to market expansion. The outsourcing of credentialing services is also gaining traction, as healthcare organizations seek to reduce internal costs and improve efficiency. This trend is particularly pronounced in larger enterprise settings. However, challenges remain, including the complexity of regulatory compliance across diverse jurisdictions and the potential for data breaches. Maintaining data security and ensuring compliance with evolving regulations represent key restraints to market growth. Segmentation within the market reveals significant opportunities across various service types, including individual physician credentialing, CAQH database utilization, insurance panel applications, and comprehensive outsourcing services. The application segment shows a strong demand from both enterprise-level healthcare systems and individual physicians, reflecting the widespread need for efficient credentialing solutions across all scales of operation. The North American region is expected to maintain a dominant market share, propelled by strong regulatory frameworks and high healthcare expenditure, followed by Europe and Asia-Pacific. The continued expansion of telehealth and value-based care models will further drive demand for sophisticated and streamlined credentialing services in the coming years, reinforcing the long-term growth prospects of this market.
We offer a doctor database in India that is designed to help you generate highly qualified sales leads. With our Doctors Database, you can easily connect with the appropriate healthcare professionals in India and abroad. These doctor data are invaluable for promoting and selling products, services, and solutions within the healthcare industry, as well as for medical publications, travel-related services, insurance, banking, charity/donations, and memberships, among other areas. All India Doctors Database list consists of approximately 11 lakh doctors in India who are specialists in various fields of medicine. This database of doctors in India includes Doctors across various specialties/fields of medicine such as General Practitioners, Family Physicians, Obstetrics and Gynecology Cardiology, Gastroenterology, Endocrinology and Diabetes, Anesthesia, Pediatrics, Oncology, Emergency Medicine, Neurology, Nephrology, Haematology, Internal Medicine, Dermatology etc.
This data package shows the Physician and Other Healthcare Information like Business Wire Healthcare Press Release Distribution List, Health Professional Shortage Area Mental and Dental Health, Physician Evaluation and Management Medicare Service Events and Physicians Malpractice Payments.
Comprehensive dataset of 138,077 Physician assistants in United States as of June, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.
The Unique Physician Identification Number (UPIN) Directory contains selected information on physicians, doctors of Osteopathy, limited licensed practitioners and some non-physician practitioners who are enrolled in the Medicare Program.
The data elements in the file (UPIN, full name, specialty, Physician License State Code, zip code, Medicare provider billing number and State) are extracted from the UPIN Database and are approved for public release in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) System of Records.
This dataset includes information regarding group practice participation under clinical quality of care in 2014 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid (CMS) quality program as well as the 2014 Physician Quality Report System (PQRS) Group Practice Reporting Option (GPRO) performance rates for the three Diabetes Mellitus (DM) measures and one Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) measure now publicly reported on Physician Compare.
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Analysis of ‘Office-based Health Care Providers Database’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/d2c20342-2ae3-4dde-bdcf-2cb273bee291 on 11 February 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
ONC uses the SK&A Office-based Provider Database to calculate the counts of medical doctors, doctors of osteopathy, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants at the state and count level from 2011 through 2013. These counts are grouped as a total, as well as segmented by each provider type and separately as counts of primary care providers.
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
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License information was derived automatically
Variability in mean payment per physician, number of physicians, and aggregated payments for transactions in the Open Payments database, 2014–2018, for each top-category specialty available for allopathic and osteopathic physicians.
Comprehensive dataset of 27 Physician referral services in Arizona, United States as of July, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on Septemeber 02, 2014. Through a collaborative effort with experts in doctor-elderly patient interaction who participated in the development of ADEPT, a database of approximately 435 audio and video tapes of visits of patients age 65 and older (n=46) to their primary physician was established for testing ADEPT and for access by medical educators and researchers. Data associated with each tape include reason for visit, physician characteristics (age, race, gender), patient characteristics (age, race, gender), companion characteristics (age, race, gender), and length of doctor-patient relationship. Through a collaborative effort with experts in doctor-elderly patient interaction who participated in the development of ADEPT, a database of approximately 435 audio and video tapes of visits of patients age 65 and older (n=46) to their primary physician was established for testing ADEPT and for access by medical educators and researchers. Data associated with each tape include reason for visit, physician characteristics (age, race, gender), patient characteristics (age, race, gender), companion characteristics (age, race, gender), and length of doctor-patient relationship. Patient visits to their primary physician were videotaped at four sites: an academic medical center in the Midwest, an academic medical center in the Southwest, a suburban managed care medical group, and an urban group of physicians in independent practice. Repeat visits between the same doctor and patient were taped for 19 patients resulting in 48 tapes of multiple visits. Patients were recruited in the waiting room for a convenience sample. Before the visit, patients provided demographic data and completed a global satisfaction form. Following the visit, patients completed the SF-36, and the ABIM for patient satisfaction. Two weeks following the visit, patients were contacted by telephone and asked about their understanding, compliance and their utilization of health services over the past year. At twelve months, patients were contacted by telephone for administration of the SF-36, the global satisfaction form, and the utilization of health services survey. Data Availability: Archived at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine Library. Interested researchers and medical educators should contact the PI, Mary Ann Cook, JVCRadiology (at) sbcglobal.net * Dates of Study: 1998-2001 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Anthropometric Measures * Sample Size: 46
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This dataset comprises physician-level entries from the 1906 American Medical Directory, the first in a series of semi-annual directories of all practicing physicians published by the American Medical Association [1]. Physicians are consistently listed by city, county, and state. Most records also include details about the place and date of medical training. From 1906-1940, Directories also identified the race of black physicians [2].This dataset comprises physician entries for a subset of US states and the District of Columbia, including all of the South and several adjacent states (Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia). Records were extracted via manual double-entry by professional data management company [3], and place names were matched to latitude/longitude coordinates. The main source for geolocating physician entries was the US Census. Historical Census records were sourced from IPUMS National Historical Geographic Information System [4]. Additionally, a public database of historical US Post Office locations was used to match locations that could not be found using Census records [5]. Fuzzy matching algorithms were also used to match misspelled place or county names [6].The source of geocoding match is described in the “match.source” field (Type of spatial match (census_YEAR = match to NHGIS census place-county-state for given year; census_fuzzy_YEAR = matched to NHGIS place-county-state with fuzzy matching algorithm; dc = matched to centroid for Washington, DC; post_places = place-county-state matched to Blevins & Helbock's post office dataset; post_fuzzy = matched to post office dataset with fuzzy matching algorithm; post_simp = place/state matched to post office dataset; post_confimed_missing = post office dataset confirms place and county, but could not find coordinates; osm = matched using Open Street Map geocoder; hand-match = matched by research assistants reviewing web archival sources; unmatched/hand_match_missing = place coordinates could not be found). For records where place names could not be matched, but county names could, coordinates for county centroids were used. Overall, 40,964 records were matched to places (match.type=place_point) and 931 to county centroids ( match.type=county_centroid); 76 records could not be matched (match.type=NA).Most records include information about the physician’s medical training, including the year of graduation and a code linking to a school. A key to these codes is given on Directory pages 26-27, and at the beginning of each state’s section [1]. The OSM geocoder was used to assign coordinates to each school by its listed location. Straight-line distances between physicians’ place of training and practice were calculated using the sf package in R [7], and are given in the “school.dist.km” field. Additionally, the Directory identified a handful of schools that were “fraudulent” (school.fraudulent=1), and institutions set up to train black physicians (school.black=1).AMA identified black physicians in the directory with the signifier “(col.)” following the physician’s name (race.black=1). Additionally, a number of physicians attended schools identified by AMA as serving black students, but were not otherwise identified as black; thus an expanded racial identifier was generated to identify black physicians (race.black.prob=1), including physicians who attended these schools and those directly identified (race.black=1).Approximately 10% of dataset entries were audited by trained research assistants, in addition to 100% of black physician entries. These audits demonstrated a high degree of accuracy between the original Directory and extracted records. Still, given the complexity of matching across multiple archival sources, it is possible that some errors remain; any identified errors will be periodically rectified in the dataset, with a log kept of these updates.For further information about this dataset, or to report errors, please contact Dr Ben Chrisinger (Benjamin.Chrisinger@tufts.edu). Future updates to this dataset, including additional states and Directory years, will be posted here: https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/amd.References:1. American Medical Association, 1906. American Medical Directory. American Medical Association, Chicago. Retrieved from: https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000543547.2. Baker, Robert B., Harriet A. Washington, Ololade Olakanmi, Todd L. Savitt, Elizabeth A. Jacobs, Eddie Hoover, and Matthew K. Wynia. "African American physicians and organized medicine, 1846-1968: origins of a racial divide." JAMA 300, no. 3 (2008): 306-313. doi:10.1001/jama.300.3.306.3. GABS Research Consult Limited Company, https://www.gabsrcl.com.4. Steven Manson, Jonathan Schroeder, David Van Riper, Tracy Kugler, and Steven Ruggles. IPUMS National Historical Geographic Information System: Version 17.0 [GNIS, TIGER/Line & Census Maps for US Places and Counties: 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950; 1910_cPHA: ds37]. Minneapolis, MN: IPUMS. 2022. http://doi.org/10.18128/D050.V17.05. Blevins, Cameron; Helbock, Richard W., 2021, "US Post Offices", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/NUKCNA, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:8ROmiI5/4qA8jHrt62PpyA== [fileUNF]6. fedmatch: Fast, Flexible, and User-Friendly Record Linkage Methods. https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/fedmatch/index.html7. sf: Simple Features for R. https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/sf/index.html
Techsalerator covers all healthcare professionals and contacts with emails, NPI addresses, home addresses and more.
This dataset includes all types of Healthcare professional categories including:
Abdominal Radiology Addiction Medicine Addiction Psychiatry, Psychiatry Adolescent Medicine, Pediatrics Adolescent Medicine, Internal Medicine Adult Cardiac Anesthesiology, Anesthesiology Adult Congenital Heart Disease, Internal Medicine Adult Reconstructive Orthopaedic Surgery, Orthopaedic Surgery Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant Cardiology, Internal Medicine Aerospace Medicine, Preventive Medicine Allergy and Immunology Anesthesiology Anesthesiology Critical Care Medicine, Emergency Medicine Blood Banking-Transfusion Medicine, Pathology Brain Injury Medicine, Neurology Brain Injury Medicine, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Brain Injury Medicine, Psychiatry Cardiothoracic Radiology, Diagnostic Radiology Cardiovascular Disease, Internal Medicine Chemical Pathology, Pathology Child Abuse Pediatrics, Pediatrics Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychiatry Child Neurology/Pediatric Neurology, Neurology Clinical Biochemical Genetics, Medical Genetics and Genomics Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology, Internal Medicine Clinical Genetics and Genomics, Medical Genetics and Genomics Clinical Informatics, Diagnostic Radiology Clinical Informatics, Anesthesiology Clinical Informatics, Preventive Medicine Clinical Informatics, Pathology Clinical Neurophysiology, Neurology Colon and Rectal Surgery Complex Family Planning, Obstetrics and Gynecology Complex General Surgical Oncology, General Surgery Complex Pediatric Otolaryngology, Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Congenital Cardiac Surgery, Thoracic Surgery/Thoracic and Cardiac Surgery Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry/Psychosomatic Medicine, Psychiatry Craniofacial Surgery, Plastic Surgery Critical Care Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology Critical Care Medicine, Anesthesiology Critical Care Medicine, Internal Medicine Cytopathology, Pathology Dermatology Dermatopathology, Pathology Dermatopathology, Dermatology Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Pediatrics Diagnostic Medical Physics, Medical Physics Diagnostic Radiology Emergency Medical Services, Emergency Medicine Emergency Medicine Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Internal Medicine Endovascular Surgical Neuroradiology, Neurological Surgery Endovascular Surgical Neuroradiology, Diagnostic Radiology Epilepsy, Neurology Family Medicine/Family Practice Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery, Urology Foot and Ankle Orthopaedic Surgery, Orthopaedic Surgery Forensic Pathology, Pathology Forensic Psychiatry, Psychiatry Gastroenterology, Internal Medicine General Surgery Geriatric Medicine, Family Medicine/Family Practice Geriatric Medicine, Internal Medicine Geriatric Psychiatry, Psychiatry Gynecologic Oncology, Obstetrics and Gynecology Hand Surgery, General Surgery Hand Surgery, Orthopaedic Surgery Hand Surgery, Plastic Surgery Hematology, Internal Medicine Hematology and Medical Oncology, Internal Medicine Hematopathology/Hematology, Pathology Hospice and Palliative Medicine Infectious Disease, Internal Medicine Integrated Plastic Surgery Integrated Thoracic Surgery Integrated Vascular Surgery Internal Medicine Internal Medicine-Critical Care Medicine, Emergency Medicine Internal Medicine-Emergency Medicine Internal Medicine-Pediatrics Internal Medicine-Psychiatry Interventional Cardiology, Internal Medicine Interventional Radiology, Diagnostic Radiology Laboratory Genetics and Genomics, Medical Genetics and Genomics Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology Medical Biochemical Genetics, Medical Genetics and Genomics Medical Genetics and Genomics Medical Microbiology Pathology, Pathology Medical Oncology, Internal Medicine Medical Physics, Diagnostic Radiology Medical Toxicology, Pediatrics Medical Toxicology, Emergency Medicine Medical Toxicology, Preventive Medicine Micrographic Dermatologic Surgery, Dermatology Molecular Genetic Pathology, Pathology Molecular Genetic Pathology, Medical Genetics and Genomics Musculoskeletal Imaging Radiology, Diagnostic Radiology Musculoskeletal Oncology Musculoskeletal Oncology, Orthopaedic Surgery Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, Pediatrics Nephrology, Internal Medicine Neuro-Ophthalmology, Ophthalmology Neurocritcial Care , Anesthesiology Neurocritical Care, Internal Medicine Neurocritical Care, Neurological Surgery Neurocritical Care, Neurology Neurodevelopmental Disabilities, Neurology Neurological Surgery Neurology Neuromuscular Medicine, Neurology Neuromuscular Medicine, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Neuropathology, Pathology Neuroradiology, Diagnostic Radiology Neurotology, Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Nuclear Medical Physics, Med...
The Physician and Physician Practice Research Database (3P-RD) captures characteristics of physicians and physician practices in 13 states. The database describes the supply of physician services available across selected states for data year 2019-2020.