Meet Annie, Occupational Therapist at
Mountain Home Therapy!

I help you remain independent in your mountain home even if you're recovering from a surgery, injury, or living with a chronic or disabling condition, so you can stay out of hospitals, nursing homes, and assisted living facilities

Phone: 970-294-2646

Call us to learn more about our services or get an appointment scheduled today!

Address: Livermore, CO and Read Feather Lakes, CO

We serve you from the comfort of your home. You don't have to travel to a therapy clinic to receive treatment!

Hours: By appointment only

Therapy services by appointment only. We typically serve clients between 8am to 4pm. 

About Annie

Annie Scott


I grew up on the East Coast. After graduating from college with a degree in Sociology in 1981, I went to Mississippi for a summer missions experience. I found my calling there and stayed for 30 years.


While there I lived and worked first in impoverished urban and then in rural communities. In 1998, I became an Occupational Therapist, completing my degree at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.


I worked in mental health, pediatrics, neurological rehabilitation and geriatrics. During some of this period I worked in nursing homes and assisted living centers.


We moved to Colorado in 2012 and found Glacier View Meadows in 2013. We moved permanently after building our home with our own hands, finishing in October of 2021.


In 2014, I discovered my love for serving older adults in their homes. I discovered the home as the best environment for recovering after hospitalization, illness or injury. Usually it's where people want to be; where they are "the captain of their ship" and are comfortable in their familiar setting.


I've spent 8 years in home health, helping seniors recover their independence after a sudden injury, illness or change brought on by chronic medical conditions. I did this while working closely with doctors, nurses, medical social workers, speech and physical therapists, in Fort Collins and Loveland.


Last year I began preparing to move toward my dream of bringing the neighborhood focus I loved in Mississippi with my professional training and experience as an Occupational Therapist.


Through a newly created ministry of the Morningstar Church and in partnership with the North 40 Mountain Alliance, I've been visiting elders on our mountain learning firsthand about the joys and challenges of thriving in a mountain community as aging inexorably occurs.


I've learned about the determination many feel to spend their last decades in their mountain homes. I've met scores of caring neighbors meeting the practical needs of the elders living close by.


I've come to understand aging in place as a basic human right and need. I want to offer my training, 22 years of experience, and first-hand knowledge of relationships and resources in our area. I see this as a winning combination and potential "game changer" for those determined to live in their beloved mountain home "forever."


I'm now ready to begin a community-based practice of Occupational Therapy serving Livermore and Red Feather Lakes.


About Occupational Therapy

What is occupational therapy?

The goal of occupational therapy is to improve the skills that are needed to live life as independently as possible. Occupational therapy can help you to cope with a mental or physical limitation and manage better in everyday life as well as improving your quality of life and health.


Occupational therapists are medical professions that use their clinical judgement and skills to provide their clients with an individualized treatment plan. The work of an OT is not done until you not only recover strength and mobility but that your are able to engage in the tasks or "occupations" you treasure. These include the restoration of your ability to do activities of daily living including the basics like getting in and out of bed with less pain, dressing, bathing or instrumental activities of daily living like developing a medication organizing plan, completing housekeeping tasks, gardening or workshop activities that make you feel like "yourself" again.


OTs analyze these desired activities and come up with "out of the box" solutions to help you do these again. Sometimes the task itself needs to be modified so you can do it. Sometimes its a new technique to complete your task with your current level of energy to complete it successfully.


OTs often recommend new gadgets or equipment called "assistive devices" that, with therapy, can turn the impossible into the do-able. OTs are also caregiver trainers, working with family and friends to provide that just right support to the care receiver as well as take care of their own wellbeing while completing the demanding task of caring for a loved one.


OTs can work independently or with a team of other medical professionals to provide restorative treatments to get you back on your feet and back to what you need or love to do.

View Details
- +
Sold Out