Similar to healthcare organizations across the country, COVID-19 has had a significant impact on our staff, physicians and administrators at Fairfield Medical Center. These are some of their stories.
Loving wife Joyce Murphy lost her husband, Earl “Butch” Murphy, Jr., to cancer in March. Butch fought a five-year battle with multiple myeloma, a form of cancer that affects plasma cells found in bone marrow, and received his care at Fairfield Medical Center’s Cancer Care and Infusion Center.
To learn more about our FMC Foundation and how you can make a difference, call 740-687-8107 or visit fmchealth.org/foundation.
At Fairfield Medical Center, we are fortunate to have witnessed many inspiring, hopeful stories that have come about as a result of COVID-19.
On June 28, Kyle and Katie VanAtta and their new son, Landon, were the first recipients of a Lancaster High School keepsake football.
When you’re pregnant or breastfeeding, you have specific dietary needs to best support optimal growth and development for baby.
TAVR (transcatheter aortic valve replacement) is a revolutionary, minimally invasive procedure used to treat aortic valve disease.
No one is prepared for getting breast cancer. Fortunately, we’re prepared to treat it. Our team provides care continuity, from diagnosis to treatment to reconstructive surgery. Ours is an optimal healing environment created so that you can be assured that everything that can be done is being done for you and your family.
The Structural Heart Team at Fairfield Medical Center is dedicated to improving the longevity and quality of life for those with structural heart disease. Our comprehensive program offers expert care, a rapid diagnosis and advanced, life-saving treatment right here in your community.
Through group or individual sessions with a nurse and dietitian, you can learn skills to maintain your health, avoid complications and achieve personal health goals.
The heart must be steady. It must be sure, dependable, constant. These measures of a healthy heart also serve as the foundation of the commitment made to those who serve our heart patients at Fairfield Medical Center: we’re here for you when you need us most.
When Shannon Russell experienced a frightening complication shortly after giving birth, she felt comforted knowing her OB/GYN would see her through it.
A fall at work brought on a series of events that Mike Miller never expected. The decisions made by his care team at FMC helped to ensure his quick recovery.
Sudden cardiac arrest survivor Scott Hardwick nearly died multiple times in one day, but the quick thinking and action of his caregivers saved his life.
Sclerotherapy and radiofrequency ablation (RFA) are techniques used to treat visible veins in the legs. Read on to learn more about these procedures.
Fairfield Medical Center is proud to be designated as a Primary Stroke Center, a certification that recognizes the hospital’s ability to meet standards that support better outcomes for stroke care.