New orthopedic surgeon joins Noble Health

By Theo Tate
Posted 11/4/21

Dr. Brian Ellefsen remembers the last time he was in Montgomery City.

It was when he was an undergraduate student at the University of Missouri-Columbia a long time ago.

“A couple of …

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New orthopedic surgeon joins Noble Health

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Dr. Brian Ellefsen remembers the last time he was in Montgomery City.


It was when he was an undergraduate student at the University of Missouri-Columbia a long time ago.

“A couple of buddies were here,” Ellefsen said. “We ate at a diner. It was some years ago in the 1980s. I remembered that the biscuits and gravy at whatever the diner was were crazy good.”

Ellefsen returned to Montgomery City on Oct. 14 for a meet and greet session with community residents at the Montgomery City Council Chambers. He is the new orthopedic surgeon for Noble Health, which has clinics in Montgomery City and Wellsville.

“He moved and bought a house in Audrain County,” Noble Health co-founder Tom Carter said. “So he’s just not some guy driving a couple of hours to help us out once in a while. He’s here.”

The 6-foot-7 Ellefsen had four meet and greet sessions in a span of five hours on Oct. 14. His first one was at the Audrain Ambulance District headquarters. After his visit to Montgomery City, Ellefsen went to Wellsville and held a session at the municipal building. His fourth and last visit was at the Vandalia YMCA.

Carter said Ellefsen has been valuable since he joined the Noble Health staff in May. He recently completed two total knee replacements.

“He’s doing clinics in Mexico a couple of days a week,” Carter said. “He’s always seeing close to 100 people during those clinics. That’s growing every week.”

Ellefsen said one of the best things about his job after six months is meeting with people in communities such as Montgomery City, Wellsville and Mexico.

“In the stage of my career, I want a place that’s home where I invest and interact with people,” Ellefsen said. “So I go to dinner and people would come up and say, ‘Hey, doc, how's it going?’ You don’t get that in the city. You can go to eat and not see anybody you know. I would walk in Wal-Mart and I’ve got patients come up and said, ‘Hi.’”

Ellefsen has over 25 years of experience in sports medicine and orthopedic surgery. After graduating from Mizzou in 1984 and the Kansas City College of Medicine and Biosciences four years later, Ellefsen completed his residency in orthopedic surgery in St. Louis and Tampa, Fla. He worked as the team physician for several college and high school teams.

A native of northern Wisconsin, Ellefsen began his career in Marshall, Mo.

“I took care of about 3,000 college athletes,” Ellefsen said. “I was recruited into doing community orthopedics in a rural setting. I was there for a couple of years, then I decided I wanted to go into my own again. So I had an office in Sedalia, Marshall and Moberly for several years.”

Carter said Noble Health talked about having an orthopedic surgeon during a town hall meeting at the City Council Chambers on Feb. 23.

“The first thing that was brought up about Montgomery City was we wanted orthopedics,” Carter said. “So here we are with the orthopedics. We’re listening to people. We’re doing what we said we can do and in a timely fashion that we can.”

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