Pediatrics Healthcare Taxonomy Code 2080T0002X
HealthProviders DB is a comprehensive database of healthcare providers, including a complete directory of all Medical Toxicology Pediatricians.
As of today, the following are the total number of Medical Toxicology Pediatricians nationally, in your state, and near your location.
Medicare
The following are the total number of Medical Toxicology Pediatricians who accept Medicare in your state, the number who have opted out of Medicare, and the total number excluded from participation in Medicare nationwide.
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
Select the State name above or from the HealthProviders DB App filter panel to show the list of Medical Toxicology Pediatricians by State. In addition, you can also narrow the list by City and more from the filter panel.
You can download the Pediatric Medical Toxicology Physicians dataset using HealthProviders DB Export.

What do Medical Toxicology Pediatricians do?
Medical toxicology pediatricians specialize in preventing, evaluating, and treating illnesses in children that result from exposure to poisonous substances, such as drugs, chemicals, and environmental hazards.
They manage acute poisonings, provide long-term care for substance use disorders, and advise on prevention strategies.
These specialists are crucial for patient outcomes and often work in hospitals, poison control centers, and academia.
What they do
Direct patient care: They provide direct treatment in emergency departments and intensive care units for acute poisonings, including overdoses of prescription and over-the-counter medications, drugs of abuse, or exposure to chemicals.
Outpatient care: They may see patients in outpatient clinics for long-term management of issues like substance use disorders or to assess chronic health impacts from environmental exposures.
Emergency consultation: They provide expert advice to other medical professionals in a variety of settings, including at regional poison control centers.
Injury and illness prevention: They develop and implement strategies to prevent poisonings and other toxic exposures in children and adolescents.
Education and research: They teach medical students, residents, and other healthcare professionals about toxicology and research to improve understanding and treatment of toxic exposures.
Administrative and public health roles: Professionals in these fields can be involved in public health initiatives, help with terrorism preparedness, and contribute to policy at the government level.
Expertise
Acute drug and chemical poisonings, Substance use disorders and withdrawal, Environmental and workplace exposures, Bites and stings from venomous animals, and Ingestion of toxic plants or mushrooms.