An anesthesiology email list is a verified database of licensed anesthesiologists, certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs), pain medicine specialists, and anesthesiology assistants, built from conference and CME partnerships, state and national medical associations, healthcare publication networks, and B2B2C matching and verification programs. SparkDBi maintains 148,697 verified US anesthesiology contacts across 13 subspecialties.

SparkDBi Data Research TeamUpdated June 202611 min read
148,697Verified Contacts
13Subspecialties
93.5%Email Verified
MonthlyRefresh Cycle

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Survey Money
Principal
Baxter
Gartner
aramark
Oracle
PacificCare
Thermo Fisher Scientific
Philips Healthcare
Kodak

SparkDBi maintains a verified anesthesiology email list covering 148,697 anesthesiologists, certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs), pain medicine specialists, anesthesiologist assistants, and critical care anesthesiology providers across the United States. Every contact is sourced from multiple vetted channels including conference and CME partnerships, state and national professional associations, and healthcare publication networks, then validated through email inbox verification, phone validation, and physical address confirmation before delivery. The database refreshes monthly.

Anesthesiology is a device-intensive and drug-intensive specialty with a defined commercial audience. Pharmaceutical companies with anesthesia drug portfolios, medical device companies making anesthesia workstations and monitoring systems, infusion pump manufacturers, and pain management device vendors all depend on accurate, verified contact data to reach anesthesiologists and CRNAs at hospitals, surgery centres, and pain management clinics.


Who Uses the Anesthesiology Email List

Pharmaceutical companies with anesthesia drug portfolios use the list for outreach to anesthesiologists who select and administer induction agents, maintenance agents, neuromuscular blockers, and reversal agents. Propofol, ketamine, etomidate, and volatile agents (sevoflurane, desflurane, isoflurane) are all actively marketed. Neuromuscular blocking agents (rocuronium, vecuronium, succinylcholine) and their reversal agents (sugammadex/Bridion, neostigmine) represent a commercially active category with competition between Merck and generic manufacturers for anesthesiologist prescribing preference.

Anesthesia workstation manufacturers use the list for capital equipment outreach to anesthesiologists and department chiefs who influence or make purchasing decisions on anesthesia delivery systems. The major platforms from Draeger (Zeus, Perseus), GE Healthcare (Aisys CS2, Carestation), and Mindray compete in a defined market where anesthesiologist preference and hospital capital budget cycles determine adoption.

Pain management device companies use the list for outreach to pain medicine anesthesiologists who manage chronic pain through interventional procedures. Spinal cord stimulators (Medtronic, Boston Scientific, Abbott), radiofrequency ablation systems, and nerve block equipment are primary commercial categories in interventional pain medicine.

Regional anesthesia and ultrasound guidance companies target anesthesiologists who perform nerve blocks for orthopaedic, breast, and abdominal surgery. Portable ultrasound systems (SonoSite, Fujifilm, GE) and needle guidance technologies are actively marketed to regional anesthesia practitioners.

Patient monitoring companies, infusion pump manufacturers, and airway management device vendors (video laryngoscopes from Verathon, Karl Storz, Medtronic) use the list for outreach to anesthesiologists who specify equipment at the clinical level.

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Subspecialty filters, practice setting, sample records available


Anesthesiology Subspecialties and Verified Contacts

The SparkDBi anesthesiology database covers 13 subspecialties across physician anesthesiologists, CRNAs, and anesthesiology-related roles. All subspecialties are available as individual segments or combined with subspecialty flags.

SubspecialtyProvider TypeContacts
AnesthesiologistPhysician49,724
Certified Registered Nurse AnesthetistNurse44,002
Anesthesiologist - Pain MedicinePhysician3,579
Anesthesiologist AssistantPhysician Assistant2,731
Anesthesiologist - Critical Care MedicinePhysician1,787
Pediatrics - Critical Care MedicinePhysician1,448
Pain MedicinePhysician1,248
Interventional Pain MedicinePhysician737
Pediatrics - AnesthesiologistPhysician625
Sleep MedicinePhysician579
Anesthesiologist - Addiction MedicinePhysician64
Pediatrics - Sleep MedicinePhysician49
Anesthesiologist - Hospice & Palliative MedicinePhysician21

Key Drugs, Devices and Clinical Areas

General anesthesia drugs include induction agents (propofol, ketamine, etomidate, thiopental), volatile inhaled agents (sevoflurane, desflurane, isoflurane), opioid analgesics (fentanyl, sufentanil, remifentanil), neuromuscular blocking agents, and reversal drugs (sugammadex, neostigmine). Each category has active competition at the anesthesiologist level. Sugammadex (Bridion) in particular has driven significant market development activity as a replacement for neostigmine-based reversal protocols.

Regional and neuraxial anesthesia involves local anaesthetics (bupivacaine, ropivacaine, lidocaine, liposomal bupivacaine/Exparel) for nerve blocks, epidurals, and spinal anaesthesia. Pacira Biosciences has been particularly active in promoting Exparel (liposomal bupivacaine) to anesthesiologists and surgeons for postoperative pain management as part of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols.

Pain medicine is a subspecialty area within anesthesiology covering chronic pain, cancer pain, and interventional pain procedures. Spinal cord stimulation systems (Medtronic Intellis, Boston Scientific WaveWriter, Abbott Proclaim) are actively marketed to pain medicine anesthesiologists as an alternative to opioid therapy for refractory chronic pain. The opioid crisis has accelerated interest in non-opioid pain management options.

Anaesthesia workstations and patient monitoring represent the largest capital equipment categories. The Draeger Zeus and Perseus platforms compete with GE Healthcare Carestation and Mindray A-series systems. Patient monitoring for depth of anaesthesia (BIS monitoring from Medtronic) and haemodynamic monitoring (LiDCO, FloTrac) are actively marketed to anesthesiologists and critical care teams.


NPI Taxonomy Codes for Anesthesiology

CMS NPI taxonomy codes for reference. These are useful when specifying subspecialty requirements for a data order or verifying provider credentials independently. SparkDBi cross-references these as one of several validation inputs:

Taxonomy CodeClassification
207L00000XAnesthesiology (Physician)
207LP3000XPain Medicine (Anesthesiology subspecialty)
207LC0200XCritical Care Medicine (Anesthesiology)
367500000XCertified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA)
367A00000XAdvanced Practice Midwife - Anesthesiology Assistant

Practice Setting Breakdown

About 70% of anesthesiologists in the SparkDBi database practice in hospital-based settings, primarily as part of anaesthesia departments or anaesthesia group practices that staff multiple hospitals. The remaining 30% are at ambulatory surgery centres, pain management clinics, or independent group practices.

CRNAs in the database have a higher rate of independent or group practice settings, particularly in rural hospitals and ambulatory surgery centres where physician anaesthesiologist staffing is not economical. SparkDBi can filter by physician anesthesiologist vs CRNA within the same database request.


Geographic and International Coverage

The US anesthesiology database covers all 50 states. Highest concentrations are in California, Texas, New York, Florida, and Pennsylvania, reflecting population density and the locations of major hospital systems and academic anaesthesia programmes.

International anesthesiology data is available for the UK, Germany, France, Canada, and Australia. Contact SparkDBi for current counts by country.


Deliverability

Hospital-based anesthesiologists and CRNAs use enterprise email environments with standard filtering. Anesthesiologists in private group practices, ambulatory surgery centres, and pain management clinics use practice-domain email with lighter filtering. SparkDBi flags enterprise vs independent domains in delivered datasets.


Data Enrichment and Available Fields

For existing anesthesiology contact lists, SparkDBi can append or verify: NPI numbers, subspecialty classifications, practice setting, email addresses, practice addresses, and license status. Match rates average 74% against the full database.

Full NameNPI NumberSubspecialtyNPI Taxonomy CodeEmail AddressPractice AddressCity / State / ZIPPhone (where available)Hospital AffiliationPractice SettingLicense StateCell Phone (where available)Home AddressPersonal Email (where available)

Compliance

The SparkDBi anesthesiology email list contains no patient data. All records are professional contact information for licensed anesthesiology providers. The database is HIPAA-aligned, CAN-SPAM compliant, and CCPA-aware. Business Associate Agreements are available on request.


Frequently Asked Questions


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