search.noResults

search.searching

saml.title
dataCollection.invalidEmail
note.createNoteMessage

search.noResults

search.searching

orderForm.title

orderForm.productCode
orderForm.description
orderForm.quantity
orderForm.itemPrice
orderForm.price
orderForm.totalPrice
orderForm.deliveryDetails.billingAddress
orderForm.deliveryDetails.deliveryAddress
orderForm.noItems
Dr. Marvin Fowler has been here from the beginning of our health system’s founding in the 1950s. A servant of our community and health system, he’s also served the health needs of our country’s bravest on the frontlines. Dr. Fowler just turned 95 years old, and is still quick on his feet, just like these pictures show from our Fun Run back in 2019!


Fowler is something of a living archive


at Ozarks Healthcare, one of the originals who took medicine out of cramped down- town quarters and brought it into the modern confines of a new hospital. That 50-bed structure cast the mold for all the things that would follow in West Plains, providing a spark for the health system’s current status as a regional medical draw and growing it into the biggest employer in the region. And at the center of it then was Marvin


Fowler – Arkansan by birth, Missourian by choice. “I always wanted to go into medicine,”


he said. “My father, T.P., was a family doc- tor in Harrison, Arkansas, where I grew up. My brother Ross, who was 17 years older than me, was a family doctor there. And my Uncle Jim Fowler was a doctor there. As I grew, I was called ‘Little Doc.’ “My dad was 51 when I was born, and


my mother was 46. Back in the late ’20s, during the Depression and all that, Dad wanted to get me educated because he had a feeling he wasn’t going to live to be old. In those days, you were old if you were 70. So, he started pushing me through school. I started college at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville at 16 and then graduated from the University of Arkansas School of Medicine when I was 23.” Following a year’s internship and two


years in the U.S. Army — 15 months of it in Korea — Fowler did a year of residency in


Louisiana and then set his sights toward home. He’d get close. “I wanted to come back to the Ozarks but


Harrison had plenty of doctors, so I looked across Missouri and Northwest Arkansas which, of course, was booming and had plenty of doctors. I settled on West Plains,” he said. “When I came here in ’54, there were four doctors. I was number five.” Fowler set up a general practice and


settled into the life of a small-town physi- cian. Like all doctors in West Plains at the time, Fowler treated patients through the downtown Christa Hogan Hospital while city leaders dreamed of a more modern healthcare facility. “It was a two-story brick building on


East Main, originally a girls’ school,” he said. “Most of the babies at that time were delivered there. And they gave me staff privileges there, too, of course. But so much of our healthcare that was of any seriousness went to Springfield. We didn’t have ambulances then; the funeral home would use the hearse to deliver critically ill people to Springfield.” Also in that era, many advancements in medicine were just around the corner, but they might as well have been on the moon in day-to-day rural Missouri. “We had quite a bit of communicable diseases,” Fowler said. “A long time ago, we didn’t have antibiotics; we had sulfa drugs which were about the best thing we could do for impactions. But there was quite a


bit of pneumonia in the winter season. And we had tularemia, which is a tick- borne disease. Had a lot of tonsillitis, and we used some sulfa drugs for that. When I came in ’54, I was getting to use penicillin shots, but that was just coming out and it was the extent of the antibiotics. “We treated so many things then that


you don’t see now. We had polio; the polio vaccine was just coming in during the mid to late ’50s, and I recall we were very eager to get all the kids vaccinated for polio.” The construction of the new hospital


was a landmark achievement for West Plains, one upon which Ozarks Healthcare continues to build its reputation. Fowler liked what he saw then, and now at 95, he likes what he sees today and knows what it means for the generations to come in the town he long ago adopted as his own. “It makes me feel proud. Oh, proud,”


he said. “I’ve always loved this commu- nity. I enjoy interacting with the people in the community. I’ve said several times that I’ve never seen a board that I served on that I didn’t enjoy because that’s where you have community leaders. “The progression of the hospital through


the years has just been amazing. The pres- ent administration has done such a good job of bringing in so many specialists. And the growth in the hospital seems like every decade we have another expansion. And this last one was just magnificent. They’ve really done such a wonderful job.”


• SUMMER 2022 | INSIGHT | 21


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34  |  Page 35  |  Page 36  |  Page 37  |  Page 38  |  Page 39  |  Page 40  |  Page 41  |  Page 42  |  Page 43  |  Page 44