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Ophthalmologists Data & Contact Lists

Ophthalmologist data with subspecialty focus, surgical capabilities, and verified practice contacts.

Also known as: eye surgeon

The Ophthalmologists Market

Ophthalmologists are the surgical eye physicians, a high-value group for device, pharmaceutical, and imaging companies, with subspecialties spanning retina, cornea, glaucoma, and cataract. Much of their volume has shifted to ambulatory surgery centers, and the field is consolidating under regional groups and private equity. The combination of high per-case device spend and subspecialized practice makes precise targeting valuable. Demand is steady and aging-driven, especially on the cataract and retina sides.

Where Ophthalmologists Concentrate

Ophthalmologists concentrate in metros and around the surgery centers and hospitals where they operate, with subspecialists clustering near referral networks and academic centers. Retina and glaucoma specialists anchor regional referral hubs. Private-equity groups concentrate in markets they have entered. Targeting by subspecialty and surgical site matters far more than raw geography for this surgical specialty.

Who Controls Ophthalmologists Purchasing Decisions

Device and pharmaceutical decisions involve the surgeon, but purchasing often runs through the surgery center or group's value-analysis and procurement function. In a private-equity-backed group, contracts may centralize further. The surgeon drives clinical preference while the administrator controls the contract. Knowing whether a surgeon is independent, group-affiliated, or hospital-employed tells you where the decision sits.

What Makes Ophthalmologists Data Hard to Get Right

Ophthalmologists subspecialize heavily, and the buyer for a retina drug differs entirely from one for a cataract device, but the general ophthalmology code does not capture subspecialty. Surgeons operate across a clinic and one or more surgery centers, so the listed address rarely shows where they operate. Surgical volume and subspecialty, the attributes buyers prioritize, have to be added beyond the registry.

The Data Fields That Matter Most for Ophthalmologists

Buyers want the subspecialty, whether the surgeon practices in a clinic or surgery center, surgical volume signals, group versus independent versus hospital affiliation, and the surgeon or procurement contact. The IOL, drug, and device lines a practice uses matter to manufacturers. The registry record is only a starting point, since subspecialty and surgical site have to be layered on.

How Provyx Keeps Ophthalmologists Data Current

What goes stale is affiliation and surgical site, because ophthalmologists change groups, add surgery-center relationships, and shift subspecialty emphasis. A surgeon listed at one clinic may operate primarily at a center across town. Provyx rebuilds each list at order time and works to confirm current subspecialty, affiliation, and surgical sites, so device and pharmaceutical teams plan against where cases happen.

Who Buys Ophthalmologists Data

Surgical-device and intraocular-lens makers build territory lists by subspecialty and volume. Ophthalmic-pharmaceutical teams target prescribers for retina, glaucoma, and dry-eye drugs. Imaging and diagnostic-equipment vendors reach practices investing in technology, and surgery-center partners recruit surgeons by volume. Group acquirers round out the set.

How Teams Use Ophthalmologists Data

An IOL maker builds a territory list of cataract surgeons by volume and surgical site. A pharmaceutical team targets retina specialists for an injectable drug, and an imaging vendor reaches practices upgrading diagnostics. A surgery-center partner recruits high-volume surgeons. Each use case depends on subspecialty and surgical-site data the general code does not provide.

What Accurate Ophthalmologists Data Is Worth

Segmenting by subspecialty and volume is what the data is worth, because a retina-drug rep wastes effort on cataract surgeons and a device maker wastes it on low-volume practices. A correctly segmented list routes high-cost device and pharmaceutical reps only to the surgeons who fit, where the return on precise data is largest. For high-per-case spend, that targeting pays for the data many times over.

Outreach That Works for Ophthalmologists

Reach the surgeon for clinical preference and the surgery-center or group administrator for the contract, since both shape device and drug decisions. Lead with outcomes, efficiency, and cost per case. Email and LinkedIn to named contacts outperform a general line. Outreach that reflects the surgeon's subspecialty and where they operate lands far better than a generic ophthalmology pitch.

When to Reach Ophthalmologists

Device and drug buying aligns with surgery-center budget cycles, formulary decisions, and new-product launches. A surgeon joining a group, a new surgery-center relationship, or the adoption of a new platform are strong triggers. Timing outreach to those moments and to budget cycles beats an untimed approach.

Common Mistakes When Targeting Ophthalmologists

Treating ophthalmology as one audience is the central mistake, since subspecialties buy entirely different products. Using the listed address as the surgical site is the second, because surgeons operate elsewhere. Pitching only the surgeon and ignoring procurement is the third. The fourth is ignoring volume, which determines whether a high-cost rep visit is justified.

The Bottom Line on Ophthalmologists Data

For ophthalmology, segment by subspecialty and surgical volume and capture where surgeons operate, because those attributes decide both the buyer and whether a visit is worth it. Reach the surgeon for preference and the administrator for the contract. A subspecialty-aware, site-accurate list routes high-cost device and drug reps only where they convert.

How to Segment Your Ophthalmologists List

  • Subspecialty: retina, cornea, glaucoma, cataract
  • Clinic vs surgery-center practice
  • Surgical volume signals
  • Independent vs group vs hospital
  • Device and drug lines used
  • Region

Data Available for Ophthalmologists

  • Provider name and credentials
  • NPI number and taxonomy code
  • Practice name and address
  • Direct email address
  • Phone number (direct line where available)
  • Practice size and type
  • State license information

How It Works

  1. Tell us what you need. Specify the ophthalmologists subtypes, geography, and any other filters for your target list.
  2. We build your list. We pull matching records from our verified database and deliver a clean CSV or Excel file.
  3. Start your outreach. Use the data for email campaigns, direct mail, phone outreach, or CRM enrichment.
Healthcare email list building process for ophthalmologists showing the funnel from NPI universe to verified deliverable contacts
How Provyx builds verified ophthalmologists email lists from 2.4M+ NPI records.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you segment ophthalmologists by subspecialty?

Yes. We separate retina, cornea, glaucoma, and cataract focus, since device and pharmaceutical buyers target very different products to each subspecialty.

Can you capture where a surgeon operates?

Surgeons work across clinics and surgery centers, so we work to capture surgical sites rather than only the office address the registry lists.

Can you flag surgical volume?

Where volume signals are available, we flag them so device and drug teams can prioritize the surgeons who justify a high-cost rep visit.

Can you reach procurement, not just the surgeon?

Yes. Device and drug contracts often run through a surgery-center or group procurement function, so we work to attach that contact alongside the surgeon.

Can you identify the device or drug lines a practice uses?

Where a practice discloses its IOL, drug, or platform choices, we capture them so manufacturers can target switch or expansion opportunities.

Can you flag group or PE-backed practices?

Yes. We work to flag independent, group, and hospital-affiliated surgeons, since purchasing centralizes for consolidated groups.

How current is affiliation and site data?

We rebuild each list at order time and work to confirm current subspecialty, affiliation, and surgical sites, since ophthalmologists change groups and centers.

Can you build a single-subspecialty list?

Yes. We can scope a build to one subspecialty, such as retina or cataract, for a focused device or pharmaceutical campaign.

Can you build a list for a single surgical procedure?

Yes. We can scope a build to surgeons performing a specific procedure, such as cataract or intravitreal injections, so device and drug outreach matches the case type.

Can you flag academic and teaching ophthalmologists?

Where a surgeon holds an academic or teaching role, we flag it, since key-opinion-leader targeting and research recruitment prioritize those practitioners.

Can you combine subspecialty and surgical-volume filters?

Yes. We can layer subspecialty and volume together, for example high-volume retina specialists in a region, so a device or drug team works only the accounts that justify a visit.

What ophthalmologists data does Provyx provide?

We provide verified practice data for ophthalmologists including owner contacts, NPI details, taxonomy codes, practice addresses, website, and LinkedIn profile. Every record is verified against the CMS NPI Registry. Direct email and mobile enrichment available as add-ons.

How accurate is the ophthalmologists contact data?

Our ophthalmologists data is verified against multiple sources including the CMS NPI Registry, state licensing boards, and commercial databases. We continuously verify records to catch moves, closures, and contact changes.

Can I filter ophthalmologists data by geography?

Yes. You can filter ophthalmologists records by state, metro area, ZIP code, or custom radius. We can build targeted lists for specific regions or provide nationwide coverage.

How often is Ophthalmologists data updated?

We verify ophthalmologists records on a continuous basis. Our system cross-checks the CMS NPI Registry for status changes, monitors practice websites for updated contact info, and flags records when providers move, retire, or change practice groups. You won't get a static list that goes stale after a month.

What format does the Ophthalmologists data come in?

We deliver ophthalmologists data in CSV, Excel, or CRM-ready formats. If you need custom field mapping to match your CRM or marketing platform, we'll handle that before delivery so you can import and start outreach immediately.

How do you deliver a ophthalmologists list?

We deliver ophthalmologists data in CSV, Excel, or CRM-ready format with the fields you specify. Each list is built when you order, so it reflects current ophthalmologists rather than a stale snapshot, and we can map columns to your CRM before delivery.

Is the ophthalmologists data verified?

Where ophthalmologists hold NPIs, records are verified against the CMS NPI registry and triangulated with state licensing boards and current public records. For ophthalmologists that operate as businesses without an NPI, we source from business records and confirm against live signals at build time.

Can you start with a sample ophthalmologists list?

Yes. We can build a small sample of ophthalmologists records so you can check fit and accuracy before committing to a full list, with no annual contract required.

Can you scope a ophthalmologists list to a specific geography?

Yes. We can scope a ophthalmologists build to a single state, a metro, a county, or a custom radius around a location, so a territory or local team works only the area that matters to them.

What fields can you include for ophthalmologists?

Beyond name and practice address, we can include the owner or decision-maker contact, NPI and taxonomy where applicable, phone, website, and the segmentation attributes that matter for ophthalmologists. Direct email and mobile enrichment are available as add-ons.

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