Medicare Procedure and Patient Information
2019 Medicare Patient Data
Information about Medicare patients treated by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN.
| Non-Hispanic White | |
|---|---|
| Black | |
| Hispanic | |
| Asian | |
| Other | |
| Native American |
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Emily Joy Knobel, APRN is a general practitioner in Missoula, MT specializing in general practice. Emily Joy Knobel, APRN is affiliated with Providence, PROVIDENCE HEALTH AND SERVICES MT and Perioperative Medicine Clinic.
Depression
Everyone knows what it feels like to get the blues once in a while. But depression is a serious illness that is more severe than a bad day and lasts much longer. Symptoms of depression stop a person from being able to function and enjoy daily activities for weeks or months at a time. It can happen to anyone, and it isn't something that people can control by force of will or "snap out of it."
Some common symptoms of depression include:
We don't yet know what causes depression, but it's thought that it is a combination of genetic, biological, environmental, and social influences. Because of this, the most effective treatments for depression combine medication with psychotherapy. Therapy, especially cognitive-behavioral therapy, can be extremely helpful in resolving the negative thoughts and feelings that come with depression. It gives patients new tools that they can use themselves to cope when their depression is making them feel down.
Some of the common medications used to treat depression include antidepressants such as SSRI's (Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft) or atypical antidepressants (Cymbalta, Wellbutrin). It's important to remember that these medications have different effects on everybody, and no one medication works right for everyone. Patients may have to try a couple before finding the one that works just right for them. If the first medication they try doesn't work, they should talk to their doctor about trying something else. In extreme cases where medication is not enough, electro-convulsive therapy and hospitalization may be the answer to keeping a severely depressed person safe.
Depression is a difficult illness to deal with, but it is more common than believed and there are many people who can help. With the right treatment, individuals with depression can get back to fully enjoying life again.
Eating Disorders
Eating disorders are mental and physical illnesses that impact behavior, emotions, and thoughts about eating, food, body appearance, and weight. These disorders are characterized by preoccupations with food and physical size, resulting in dramatic lifestyle changes and adverse health effects. In the past, eating disorders were often diagnosed using BMI (body mass index), or by assessing someone's weight. Eating disorders specialists now recognize that eating disorders may occur in people of all sizes. The most common eating disorders are anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge-eating disorder (BED).
Anorexia nervosa, frequently referred to as anorexia, is a disorder where people severely restrict the types and quantity of food they eat. Those with anorexia have an extreme fear of eating and gaining weight and may repeatedly weigh themselves or engage in harmful behaviors such as excessive exercise or starvation. Those with anorexia often find themselves preoccupied with food, but unable to consume a healthy amount of it. This results in symptoms such as abnormally low BMI, vitamin deficiency, fatigue, fainting, and amenorrhea (lack of menstruation in women). Anorexia may cause bluish discoloration of the hands, brittle and falling out hair, yellowish skin, and lanugo (fine, downy hair). Left untreated, anorexia can lead to organ failure, brain damage, and even death.
Bulimia nervosa, typically called bulimia, is a disorder where people binge (eat large quantities of food) and purge the food that they just consumed by vomiting, laxative abuse, fasting, or excessive exercise. This behavior is usually motivated by a feeling of powerlessness over eating and a fear of weight gain or desire for weight loss. Bulimia can occur in underweight, normal weight, and overweight people. Symptoms of bulimia include acid reflux, intestinal distress, dehydration from purging, amenorrhea, and dental erosion from vomiting. Some people with bulimia have swollen parotid glands (salivary glands near the cheeks) and red scars and marks on the backs of their knuckles. Electrolyte imbalance from bulimia can be particularly severe and may lead to heart attack or stroke.
Binge eating disorder (BED) is the most common eating disorder. People with BED feel that they are unable to control the amount of food they eat and may continue to binge after reaching a point of fullness. BED binges (consuming large amounts of food) are often accompanied by feelings of sadness, guilt, and shame. Symptoms of BED include obesity, acid reflux, weight gain, and dissatisfaction with one's body. People with BED tend to experience cycles of negative emotions and binges. Binges or BED episodes can be provoked by stress, boredom, restrictive dieting, depression, and other triggers.
Other common eating disorders include:
Many people with eating disorders do not consciously develop them, and have difficulty seeking treatment. For this reason, it's important to detect and treat eating disorders as early as possible. Treatment for eating disorders can vary from therapy visits to inpatient treatment, depending on the disorder and its severity. Treatment aims to not only restore physical health and correct negative behaviors, but to also promote psychological well-being and self-confidence.
Headache
Headaches are dull or sharp pains that occur in regions of the head and face. Headaches occur in many different forms and vary in location, severity, and duration. They are not necessarily a sign of an underlying illness and often resolve on their own. However, headaches can present significant day-to-day discomfort. The most common forms of headaches include:
Living with headaches is challenging; headaches can prevent people from fully enjoying life. Medical treatment and care in avoiding certain triggers can help those with headaches begin to feel normal once again.
Information about Medicare patients treated by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN.
| Non-Hispanic White | 15 |
|---|---|
| Black | 0 |
| Hispanic | 0 |
| Asian | 0 |
| Other | 0 |
| Native American | 0 |
The top procedures that Emily Joy Knobel, APRN treated as a general practitioner in Missoula, MT during 2020 were hospital care, inpatient care, fracture surgery and lower extremity surgery.
Volume of procedures performed by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN for Medicare patients.
| fracture surgery | 17 |
|---|---|
| hospital care | 18 |
| inpatient care | 18 |
| lower extremity surgery | 17 |
Information about Medicare patients treated by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN.
| Male | 17 |
|---|---|
| Female | 51 |
| From 65 to 74 | 29 |
|---|---|
| From 75 to 84 | 17 |
| 85 and over | 0 |
| Less than 65 | 0 |
The most common conditions of Medicare patients that Emily Joy Knobel, APRN treated during 2020 were hypertension, high cholesterol, chronic kidney disease and depression.
| Hypertension | 75 |
|---|---|
| High Cholesterol | 71 |
| Stroke | 0 |
| Ischemic Heart Disease | 40 |
| Depression | 43 |
| Chronic Kidney Disease | 51 |
| Asthma | 0 |
| Osteoperosis | 28 |
| Atrial Fibrilation | 25 |
| Heart Failure | 41 |
| Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 24 |
| Diabetes | 19 |
| Dementia | 31 |
| Cancer | 0 |
The top procedures that Emily Joy Knobel, APRN treated as a general practitioner in Missoula, MT during 2021 were hospital care, inpatient care, fracture surgery and lower extremity surgery.
Volume of procedures performed by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN for Medicare patients.
| doctor visit | 43 |
|---|---|
| fracture surgery | 12 |
| hospital care | 37 |
| inpatient care | 37 |
| lower extremity surgery | 12 |
Information about Medicare patients treated by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN.
| Male | 28 |
|---|---|
| Female | 68 |
| From 65 to 74 | 39 |
|---|---|
| From 75 to 84 | 0 |
| 85 and over | 26 |
| Less than 65 | 0 |
The most common conditions of Medicare patients that Emily Joy Knobel, APRN treated during 2021 were hypertension, high cholesterol, chronic kidney disease and depression.
| Hypertension | 74 |
|---|---|
| High Cholesterol | 61 |
| Stroke | 0 |
| Ischemic Heart Disease | 36 |
| Depression | 38 |
| Chronic Kidney Disease | 47 |
| Asthma | 0 |
| Osteoperosis | 35 |
| Atrial Fibrilation | 18 |
| Heart Failure | 35 |
| Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 18 |
| Diabetes | 26 |
| Dementia | 25 |
| Cancer | 13 |
Information about Medicare patients treated by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN.
| Non-Hispanic White | 13 |
|---|---|
| Black | 0 |
| Hispanic | 0 |
| Asian | 0 |
| Other | 0 |
| Native American | 0 |
Volume of procedures performed by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN for Medicare patients.
| doctor visit | 153 |
|---|
Information about Medicare patients treated by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN.
| Male | 72 |
|---|---|
| Female | 80 |
| From 65 to 74 | 74 |
|---|---|
| From 75 to 84 | 61 |
| 85 and over | 0 |
| Less than 65 | 0 |
The most common conditions of Medicare patients that Emily Joy Knobel, APRN treated during 2023 were high cholesterol, hypertension, ischemic heart disease and depression.
| Hypertension | 75 |
|---|---|
| High Cholesterol | 75 |
| Stroke | 8 |
| Ischemic Heart Disease | 30 |
| Depression | 27 |
| Chronic Kidney Disease | 19 |
| Asthma | 14 |
| Osteoperosis | 10 |
| Atrial Fibrilation | 22 |
| Heart Failure | 16 |
| Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 14 |
| Diabetes | 21 |
| Dementia | 0 |
| Cancer | 17 |
Volume of procedures performed by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN for Medicare patients.
The highest averages for the top procedures that Emily Joy Knobel, APRN treated as a general practitioner in Missoula, MT were hospital care, inpatient care, fracture surgery and lower extremity surgery.
| doctor visit | 98 |
|---|---|
| fracture surgery | 14 |
| hospital care | 27 |
| inpatient care | 27 |
| lower extremity surgery | 14 |
Information about Medicare patients treated by Emily Joy Knobel, APRN.
| Female | 39 |
|---|---|
| Male | 23 |
| Black / African American | 0 |
|---|---|
| Asian / Pacific Islander | 0 |
| Non-Hispanic White | 5 |
| Hispanic | 0 |
| Native American / Alaskan Native | 0 |
| Other | 0 |
| 85 and over | 5 |
|---|---|
| 75 to 84 | 15 |
| Less than 65 | 0 |
| 65 to 74 | 28 |
The highest averages of the most common conditions of Medicare patients that Emily Joy Knobel, APRN treated were hypertension, high cholesterol, chronic kidney disease and depression.
| Hypertension | 44 |
|---|---|
| High Cholesterol | 41 |
| Stroke | 1 |
| Ischemic Heart Disease | 21 |
| Depression | 21 |
| Chronic Kidney Disease | 23 |
| Asthma | 2 |
| Osteoporosis | 14 |
| Heart Failure | 18 |
| Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 11 |
| Diabetes | 13 |
| Atrial Fibrillation | 13 |
| Cancer | 6 |
| Dementia | 11 |
She is certified by the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners Certification Board, Family Nurse Practitioner and has a state license in Wisconsin.
Board Certification: American Academy of Nurse Practitioners Certification Board, Family Nurse Practitioner
Licensed In: Wisconsin
Emily Joy Knobel, APRN is associated with these hospitals and organizations:
Emily Joy Knobel, APRN appears to accept the following insurance providers: Humana PPO, BCBS MT Medicare Advantage, HealthSmart (Interplan) PPO, TriWest - Tricare, BCBS MT Medicaid, United Behavioral Health Medicare Advantage-HMO, United HealthCare PPO, Providence Health Plan, First Health-Coventry PPO, Blue Cross Of Idaho Health Service, InterWest Health, Missoula County Employee Benefits Plan PPO, BCBS MT HMO-PPO, BCBS MT PPO, Pacific Source Health PPO, BCBS MT, Mountain Health Co-Op, Allegiance PPO, First Choice PPO, BCBS MT HMO, Interwest Health PPO, Interplan PPO and Blue Cross of Idaho Health Service.
According to our sources, Emily Joy Knobel, APRN accepts the following insurance providers:
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Ms. Emily Knobel is a specialist in general practice. Ms. Knobel seems to honor several insurance carriers, including United Healthcare PPO, HealthSmart, and Coventry. According to Yext, new patients are welcome to contact her office in Missoula, MT.