Today we’d like to introduce you to Anndrea Boyer PA-C.
Hi Anndrea, so excited to have you on the platform. So before we get into questions about your work-life, maybe you can bring our readers up to speed on your story and how you got to where you are today?
I didn’t originally set out to become an entrepreneur — I set out to take exceptional care of people.
I’ve been a Physician Associate for more than 14 years, working in emergency medicine, urgent care, family medicine, behavioral health, and occupational medicine. I also serve as a Major in the Utah Army National Guard. Throughout my career, I’ve been drawn to moments where people feel vulnerable and need someone steady, thoughtful, and decisive in the room.
Over time, I began noticing a pattern that deeply concerned me. Patients — especially women — were being told their labs were “normal,” yet they felt exhausted, foggy, anxious, gaining weight, struggling with sleep, or losing pieces of themselves. They weren’t looking for quick fixes — they were looking to be heard. And I knew medicine could do better.
I helped build and operate a prior clinic partnership, investing years of long hours, operational leadership, and patient care into creating something meaningful. When that chapter came to a close, I faced a defining decision: walk away from entrepreneurship or build again with greater clarity about my values.
I chose to build.
Amatoria Wellness was created from that moment — not just as another clinic, but as a place rooted in compassion, curiosity, and accountability. We focus on hormone optimization, integrative medicine, weight management, mental wellness, and comprehensive care. But more than services, we focus on partnership. Appointments aren’t rushed. Symptoms aren’t dismissed. Care plans are individualized. Patients are treated as whole people, not numbers.
Rebuilding required a lot of resilience and faith — but it also gave me the freedom to create a culture grounded in both clinical excellence and humanity. Today, I’m building a sustainable, mission-driven practice that prioritizes thoughtful medicine, strong community relationships, and mentorship for the next generation of providers.
My mission remains simple: lead with love, listen with purpose, and care with intention.
Would you say it’s been a smooth road, and if not what are some of the biggest challenges you’ve faced along the way?
It has definitely not been a smooth road.
Healthcare alone is complex — but healthcare entrepreneurship can feel like jumping out of a plane blindfolded and hoping you figure out how to build the parachute on the way down. You’re navigating regulations, insurance systems, staffing, payroll, patient care, and community trust — often simultaneously and often without a roadmap.
At the same time, life doesn’t pause.
I’ve balanced building a clinic while serving in the military, raising a family, managing finances, and carrying the emotional weight that comes with caring deeply about both patients and people who work alongside you. There have been seasons of uncertainty, difficult transitions, and moments where I questioned whether rebuilding from scratch was the right choice.
Letting go of a prior partnership after investing years of leadership and effort into building it was one of the most challenging experiences of my career. Starting over required humility, courage, and a willingness to face fear head-on.
But that is also where growth happens.
I’ve learned that strength doesn’t come from doing everything alone — it comes from building the right team, surrounding yourself with people who share your values, and being willing to ask for help when you need it. Leadership has become less about control and more about culture. Less about proving something and more about building something sustainable.
There has been a lot of love, learning, and growth along the way. The challenges refined me — as a provider, as a leader, and as a person. They clarified my priorities and strengthened my resolve to create a clinic that is grounded in integrity, compassion, and collaboration.
The road hasn’t been easy — but it has been extremely transformative.
Alright, so let’s switch gears a bit and talk business. What should we know?
Amatoria Wellness is built on the belief that healthcare should not be one-size-fits-all.
There are many forms of medicine — food, movement, sleep, stress management, supplements, mindset, community, and sometimes traditional prescriptions or procedures when they are truly needed. My approach is not about choosing one lane; it’s about understanding which tools are appropriate for each individual at each stage of life.
Too often, healthcare becomes reactive. A symptom appears, a medication is prescribed, and the deeper patterns are never explored. I believe healthcare can — and should — be proactive, preventative, and collaborative. That means looking at trends over time, understanding lifestyle factors, identifying root contributors, and helping patients build sustainable pathways forward.
What truly sets Amatoria apart is partnership.
I listen closely to my patients’ values, goals, and lived experiences. They will always know themselves better than I do. My role is to bring clinical expertise, pattern recognition, and education to the table — and together, we build a plan. Whether that includes nutrition shifts, targeted supplementation, hormone optimization, traditional medications, or structured lifestyle changes, the goal is the same: thoughtful, individualized care.
We specialize in hormone health, metabolic wellness, weight management, and integrative primary care, but the deeper mission is empowerment. I want patients to understand their bodies, not fear them. I want them to feel supported, not dismissed.
Brand-wise, I am most proud that Amatoria feels like a place of respect. Appointments are not rushed. Conversations are real. Decisions are shared. We are building a model of medicine that blends science, prevention, and humanity.
I am deeply honored to walk alongside each patient. Healthcare is not something I do to people — it is something I do with them. My commitment is to help, educate, support, and partner with individuals as they navigate their health journeys.
Are there any apps, books, podcasts, blogs or other resources you think our readers should check out?
I’m a strong believer that if I’m asking my patients to grow, change, and invest in themselves, I need to be doing the same.
One book that has deeply influenced me is Atomic Habits by James Clear. The idea that small, consistent changes compound over time resonates in both medicine and leadership. Health transformation rarely comes from dramatic overnight shifts — it comes from daily patterns. The same is true in business and in life.
I also gravitate toward leadership and resilience-focused content. My military background and entrepreneurial journey have required adaptability and emotional discipline. Books like Can’t Hurt Me by David Goggins challenge mental toughness, while Fierce Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff reminds me that resilience and grace can coexist. That balance — strength paired with humanity — has been invaluable in both medicine and leadership.
From a professional standpoint, being part of BNI has reinforced the importance of relationships, accountability, and service. Community support has been vital — especially during seasons of growth and transition.
Beyond books and podcasts, I’m constantly working on becoming better in the roles that matter most — as a mother, a partner, a healthcare leader, and a friend. I don’t always get it right. But I care deeply, and I am committed to showing up with integrity in every space I occupy.
Ultimately, the resources that help me do my best are the ones that remind me growth is ongoing — in medicine, in leadership, and in who we are as people.
Contact Info:
- Website: https://Amatoriawellness.com
- Instagram: Amatoriawellness
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Amatoriawellness








