A record of
who practices medicine —
and how they practice it.
MDRPedia is an independently-verified encyclopedia of 1,147 physicians across 9 countries. Every profile is built from primary sources — journals, registries, institutions — and carries a single, revocable mark of stature. In 2026, it earned a second mark: Ethics.
Merit is one register.
Integrity is another.
Stature tells you how much a doctor knows. The Ethics Register tells you how they practice. It's independently verified, publicly revocable, and — for the first time — embeddable on their own clinic website. A seal they earn, and a promise they sign.
The Titans
How a tier is decided
Clinical Mastery
Case volume in high-acuity interventions, complication rates, board certifications, registries.
Intellectual Legacy
H-index, landmark trials, textbook authorship, changes to clinical guidelines.
Mentorship
Tracked lineage of trainees and what they went on to do. Legacy reproduced.
Humanitarian Impact
Global health, disaster work, free clinics, care for the underserved.
The register of records
Physicians
Every verified doctor, living or historical, with full dossier and ethics record.
Directory 02Ethical Doctors
The register of integrity — Legends, Guardians, and Advocates of ethical practice.
Directory 03Rankings
By specialty, country, institution, and the four pillars of verification.
Directory 04Institutions
Hospitals, research centers, and centers of excellence — ranked and mapped.
Directory 05Rare Diseases
Conditions and the physicians verified to treat them, by country.
Directory 06Clinical Trials
Active trials, investigators, and the lineage of evidence they produce.
The Verification Ledger
Recent activityEditorial
Mission
Why build an encyclopedia and not another directory?
Directories rank doctors. Review sites count stars. Insurance portals list contracts. None of those answer the question a patient, a researcher, or a hospital actually asks: what did this person do, and does it hold up?
MDRPedia is built as a work of record. Every claim is sourced. Every source is citable. Every tier is revocable. And starting in 2026, every doctor also has an Ethics file — a separate, public ledger of how they practice, which any of us can nominate into, and any of us can scrutinize. It is not the faster way to find a doctor. It is the truer one.
One register, two names
Across the Americas, Europe, and Australasia, physicians shortened our name to reflect their primary credential. MDpedia is how the register is known in hospitals from Boston to Berlin.
Across the Middle East, South Asia, East Asia, and Africa, the platform became DRpedia — honouring the title that binds physicians from Cairo to Shanghai.