Wyoming's behavioral health provider registry shows 12 total providers as of this week's CMS NPI update, with 1 new entrant added in the past seven days. The state accounts for a minimal share of national weekly activity, reflecting Wyoming's small population and sparse behavioral health infrastructure. Year-to-date, the state has added 4 new providers, suggesting modest but steady workforce growth in the region.

A striking pattern emerges in credential composition: Wyoming has zero BCBAs, zero RBTs, and zero dual BCBA-RBT credentialed providers in this registry snapshot. Instead, the 7 providers with listed credentials hold mental health and counseling licenses—MSW, LCSW, LCPC, LPCC, and PPC credentials dominate the mix. This credential profile indicates that Wyoming's behavioral health workforce is anchored in clinical social work and professional counseling rather than board-certified behavior analysis. The absence of ABA-specific credentials suggests either that board-certified providers operate outside this registry subset, or that ABA penetration in Wyoming remains limited relative to other therapeutic modalities.

The workforce skews heavily female: 89% of providers are women, with only 1 male provider represented. The 9 individuals and 3 organizations registered span five cities—Sheridan, Casper, Cheyenne, Jackson, and Powell—with no single organization appearing multiple times in the notable organizations field, indicating a fragmented provider landscape rather than consolidated chain presence.

Wyoming's behavioral health provider base remains dispersed and credential-diverse, with no visible ABA infrastructure in this weekly snapshot—a gap that may reflect limited commercial demand or reliance on telehealth providers based outside the state.