HealthProviders DB is a comprehensive database of healthcare providers, including a complete directory of all Psychoanalysts.
Psychologist Healthcare Taxonomy Code 103TP0814X
Most Psychoanalysts registered in the National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES) identify with the alternative, more generic healthcare taxonomy:
Behavioral Health & Social Service Provider Healthcare Taxonomy Code 102L00000X
As of today, the following are the total number of Psychoanalysts nationally, in your State, and near your location.
Select a State below to view the list by State. Additionally, you can narrow the list by city, among other options, from the Filter Panel, which you can open by clicking the vertical ellipses ⋮ in the upper right corner of the app.
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 Psychoanalysis Psychologists who accept Medicare in your State, the number who have opted out of Medicare, and the total number excluded from participation in Medicare nationwide.
The diagram below shows all the Psychoanalysts across the country, represented by blue bubbles. The larger the bubble, the greater the concentration of providers in that area. Red bubbles represent Medicare-excluded providers, with the larger bubbles indicating a higher percentage of excluded providers in that region. You can change the bubble size to be based on exclusions from the Size menu.
What do Psychoanalysts do?
Psychoanalysts explore the unconscious mind to understand how early life experiences influence current behaviors, thoughts, and relationships.
They use psychoanalytic techniques, such as dream analysis and free association, to help patients uncover repressed feelings and conflicts, aiming for deep-seated personal growth and the resolution of issues like anxiety, depression, trauma, and relationship problems.
What they do
Uncover the unconscious: The core of psychoanalysis is understanding the unconscious mind and how unconscious thoughts and repressed experiences from childhood continue to affect adult life.
Use psychoanalytic techniques: Psychoanalysts employ specific methods to access and interpret the unconscious mind.
- Free Association: Patients express whatever comes to mind without censorship, allowing the analyst to identify patterns.
- Dream Analysis: Dreams are recorded and interpreted to reveal hidden thoughts, symbols, and repressed feelings.
- Transference Analysis: The analyst helps the patient understand how feelings from past relationships (like with a parent) are transferred onto the analyst or other people in their life.
Offer insights: Analysts interpret these patterns and symbols to offer patients food for thought, helping them gain insight into their own unconscious processes.
Promote profound change: By repeatedly exploring these insights in sessions, patients can begin to modify negative life patterns and achieve lasting changes in their behavior, relationships, and sense of self.
Conditions They Treat
Psychoanalysis can address a wide range of mental health challenges: Anxiety and Depression, Trauma and PTSD, Phobias and Compulsions, Low self-esteem and eating disorders, and Relationship issues and personal problems.
Key Characteristics
Holistic approach: Psychoanalysis offers a comprehensive understanding of the whole person and how various life events impact their functioning and relationships.
Long-term commitment: It’s a lengthy process that requires a willingness to engage in deep self-exploration over an extended period.
Focus on root causes: It aims to address problems at their root by understanding the unconscious roots of symptoms.
