Clinical Location Services

US Clinical Labs Directory

Locate accredited Quest Diagnostics and Labcorp health facilities across the United States. Search or navigate to retrieve secure contact information.

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Cities in Montana

Select your city to retrieve clinical clinic contacts.

Billings

0 Laboratories Listed

Missoula

0 Laboratories Listed

Great Falls

0 Laboratories Listed

Bozeman

0 Laboratories Listed

Helena

0 Laboratories Listed

Butte

0 Laboratories Listed

Kalispell

0 Laboratories Listed

Havre

0 Laboratories Listed

Anaconda

0 Laboratories Listed

Miles City

0 Laboratories Listed
Expert Testing Insights

Clinical Testing & A1C FAQs

Get expert, clinical answers to common questions about HbA1c screenings, outpatient lab networks, and diagnostic preparations.

All outpatient blood draw sites and clinical diagnostics facilities in Montana are regulated under the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) and monitored by the Montana Department of Health Services to ensure absolute testing precision.
Yes. Montana permits consumer-initiated testing, which means residents can order clinical blood draws directly online through certified partners without booking a preliminary doctor's appointment.
Both national providers operate massive, high-density patient service networks in Montana. Quest Diagnostics has a strong presence in regional suburbs, while Labcorp supports numerous clinical hubs inside metropolitan health systems.
Yes. Outpatient HbA1c diagnostic testing is covered under the preventive services benefit of Montana Medicaid (and major private plans) when officially ordered by an enrolled healthcare practitioner.
Outpatient specimens are processed in central high-performance pathology laboratories within Montana, typically updating secure online portals (MyQuest or Labcorp Patient) in 24 to 48 hours.
Yes, specialized partner networks offer in-home blood draw and mobile phlebotomy appointments in Montana for homebound individuals or those seeking clinical convenience.
Outpatient centers in Montana reference standard American Diabetes Association (ADA) ranges: Normal is below 5.7%, Prediabetes is 5.7%-6.4%, and Diabetes is officially defined at 6.5% or higher.
All clinical blood draw laboratories in Montana utilize assays standardized by the National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program (NGSP), guaranteeing absolute accuracy.
While health fairs in Montana sometimes offer rapid fingerstick screenings, these are screening tools only. Official diagnoses require a certified venous blood draw at an accredited local clinical laboratory.
Billing queries should be directed to the customer billing portal of the specific testing network (Quest Diagnostics or Labcorp) or your health insurance administrator in Montana.