Sarah-Anne is seeing patients at the Great Falls Hospital, at 3010 15th Avenue South in Great Falls. For more information, please call 406-216-8000.
Sarah-Anne Galloway, APRN, is a provider on the hospitalist team. She is a highly skilled hospitalist with experience in emergency and acute care medicine, intensive care, procedures and much more.
In 2010, Sarah-Anne received an Associate Degree in General Science and a Practical Nursing Certificate from Northern Wyoming Community College District in Sheridan, Wyoming. The following year she completed an Associate Degree of Applied Science and became a registered nurse, again from the Northern Wyoming Community College District. Sarah-Anne went on to achieve a Bachelor of Science in nursing from Colorado Mesa University in Grand Junction, Colorado in 2013. Later, she completed a Master of Science from Chamberlain College of Nursing and became a Family Nurse Practitioner in 2016. Between 2018 and 2021, Sarah-Anne gained additional training at various hospitals in Reno, Nevada and Billings, Montana as part of the Adult-Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner Post Master’s Certificate program at the University of Nevada, Reno. Through this program she spent over 650 hours working in emergency departments, intensive care units, trauma centers and more.
Sarah-Anne has experience working in clinics, urgent cares, and hospitals across Wyoming and Montana. Most recently she worked as a nurse practitioner at the Billings Clinic in Billings, Montana where she provided nighttime care to a 28-bed critical care unit.
In her spare time Sarah-Anne enjoys crocheting amigurumi critters, painting, being outdoors, and helping on the ranch with her partner and son. She especially enjoys camping, fishing, kayaking, working horses and cows, and fencing. A fun fact about Sarah-Anne is her high school in Northern California was one of three in the US to offer taxidermy as a class, which she took all three years she attended Dixon High.
Sarah-Anne describes herself as a life-long student. She knew she wanted to be a healthcare professional after having grown up with a dad in law enforcement and step-mom working out of their local fire department. That early exposure to first responders and pre-hospital care sparked a love that has only grown, leading her to rural critical and acute care.