Generations of Arizona Healers. One Mission: Making Every Patient Heard.
I know what it feels like to sit across from a provider and not be heard, because I have been that patient.
Years ago, I suffered an injury that my healthcare team failed to diagnose correctly. I raised concerns. I asked questions. And I was dismissed. My condition steadily worsened over weeks and months without proper treatment, and what could have been resolved through a conservative treatment plan ultimately required surgery. The suffering was preventable. The breakdown was simple: no one stopped to listen.
That experience changed everything about how I practice medicine. Today, careful listening is not just part of my process. It is the foundation of it. I take the time to ask the questions other healthcare teams skip, investigate symptoms others overlook, and work alongside my patients to uncover root causes before they escalate into surgeries, hospitalizations, or prolonged suffering.
“If my team had listened and diagnosed me correctly, I could have healed without surgery. That experience is exactly why I refuse to let it happen to my patients.”
In 2008, I survived a life-threatening tragedy that most people would not have walked away from. In the aftermath, I found myself asking a single question: Why was my life spared?
The answer I arrived at was clear. My experiences, my resilience, and my deep desire to serve others were not random. They were preparation. Every challenge had been shaping me for a very specific purpose: providing exceptional, compassionate healthcare to those who need it most. Since I was a young child, I have been blessed with the talents and experiences that prepared me specifically for this mission.
My commitment to accessible healthcare is deeply personal. My father spent his final days in Beaver Dam, Arizona, a remote community of fewer than 1,000 people with virtually no local healthcare options. A routine blood test could have detected his declining kidney function early enough to intervene. Instead, by the time he was diagnosed, he had progressed to kidney failure and was forced to relocate to Phoenix for treatment. He survived just one more year.
Anyone who lives in an area without adequate healthcare choices suffers, and I know this firsthand. Because I want to prevent this outcome from happening to others, I am committed to helping all those who need affordable, quality healthcare. My father’s loss remains one of the driving forces behind everything I do as a Physician Assistant in rural Arizona.
Long before I earned my credentials to practice medicine in Arizona, healing was already in my blood. My family has been serving the healthcare needs of Arizonans since before the territory became a state in 1912. That is a legacy spanning more than a century across some of Arizona’s most remote and underserved regions.
My fourth great-grandmother was a female physician in the 1800s who was called a “natural born healer.” She also practiced in Navajo County. Generations later, my stepfather, who had no idea about any of these connections, gave me the same name when I was about 8 years old.
Beyond Dr. Morris, I had no idea about my family’s deep ties to medicine until just recently. My path into healthcare was completely organic. I found my calling on my own, which makes discovering these connections all the more meaningful.
Generations of physicians and healers stretching back to the 1800s. One Physician Assistant carrying that legacy forward. For me, caring for Arizonans is not a career choice. It is a calling that runs generations deep.
I have devoted my entire life to helping others. I graduated valedictorian from junior high, high school, and college with a 3.97 GPA. I began to realize just how committed I was to the well-being of others, especially those in greatest need, during my work in home healthcare. I enjoyed that work tremendously and wanted to help many more people in the same way. That desire compelled me to continue my education and go back to school to become a Physician Assistant.
I am devoted to serving those most in need living in rural communities as a Family Medicine Physician Assistant. People who live in underserved communities often do not receive the proper medical attention and can suffer needlessly. I am determined to personally make a difference in these communities. As Lucius Annaeus Seneca once said, “A man who suffers before it is necessary, suffers more than is necessary.”
Education
King’s College | Master of Science in Physician Assistant Studies (MSPAS)
Northern Arizona University | Bachelor of Science (3.97 GPA • Valedictorian)
Star Canyon School of Nursing
Licenses & Certifications
Physician Assistant License, State of Arizona
DEA Registration
NCCPA Board Certified
ACLS / BLS for Healthcare Providers
Aesthetics Certification
I am a member of Phi Kappa Phi, Golden Key, Alpha Lambda Delta, and Alpha Epsilon Lambda honor societies. Throughout my education I received numerous scholarships, including the NHSC Scholarship, Farrington Scholarship, Maryvale Medical Scholarship, BF Foundation Scholarship, and many others. I am honored to have been voted among the Top 3 in Yavapai County for Primary Care in the 2025 Best of Yavapai awards and a recipient of the prestigious Gold Axe Award and NHSC Scholarship.
I bring a holistic and integrative approach to each of my clinical focus areas, always looking beyond surface symptoms to identify the root cause of my patients’ concerns.
Want to learn more about these services and how my practice works?