HealthProviders DB is a comprehensive database of healthcare providers, including a complete directory of all Transplant Surgery Physicians.
Physician Healthcare Taxonomy Code 204F00000X
As of today, the following are the total number of Transplant Surgery Physicians nationally, in your state, and near your location.
Select the State to show the list of Transplant Surgery Physicians by State. In addition, you can also narrow the list by City and more from the filter panel.
Alaska – Alabama – Armed Forces Pacific – Arkansas – American Samoa – Arizona – California – Colorado – Connecticut – District of Columbia – Delaware – Florida – Federated States of Micronesia – Georgia – Guam – Hawaii – Iowa – Idaho – Illinois – Indiana – Kansas – Kentucky – Louisiana – Massachusetts – Maryland – Maine – Marshall Islands – Michigan – Minnesota – Missouri – Northern Mariana Islands – Mississippi – Montana – North Carolina – North Dakota – Nebraska – New Hampshire – New Jersey – New Mexico – Nevada – New York – Ohio – Oklahoma – Oregon – Pennsylvania – Puerto Rico – Palau – Rhode Island – South Carolina – South Dakota – Tennessee – Texas – Utah – Virginia – Virgin Islands – Vermont – Washington – Wisconsin – West Virginia – Wyoming
Medicare
The following are the total number of Transplant Surgery Physicians who accept Medicare in your state, the number who have opted out of Medicare, and the total number excluded from participation in Medicare nationwide.
You can download the Transplant Surgery Physicians dataset using HealthProviders DB Export.

What do Transplant Surgeons do?
Transplant surgery physicians perform the surgical removal of a healthy organ from a donor and its transplantation into a recipient.
They are part of a multidisciplinary team that evaluates and prepares patients, performs the surgery, and manages immediate and long-term post-operative care.
Their work involves complex surgical procedures for organs such as the heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, and pancreas.
It also extends to pre-operative assessment, post-operative recovery, and managing complications like organ rejection.
What they do
Pre-operative care: Evaluating a patient’s medical history, assessing surgical risks, and working with the transplant team to prepare the patient for the operation.
Surgical procedures: Performing the surgery to remove an organ from a donor and implant it into the recipient. This is often a complex and lengthy procedure.
Post-operative care: Monitoring the patient’s recovery after the transplant, which includes managing immunosuppression medications to prevent organ rejection while minimizing side effects.
Managing complications: Identifying and treating any complications that arise after the transplant, both short-term and long-term.
Long-term follow-up: Overseeing the long-term health and follow-up care of the recipient.
Other related surgeries: Performing other procedures such as dialysis access surgery and general elective surgery.
