Editor’s note: The main story in today’s Pulse section features the Family Practice Centers and founders Dr. Domenick Ronco and Dr. Charles Fasano. Pulse is printed in advance, and we learned with deep regret of the death of Dr. Fasano over the weekend. However, his family asked that The Daily Item publish the article as planned.
Click here to see story
MIFFLINBURG — Dr. Charles P. “Chuck” Fasano, a prominent physician who helped found a chain of Family Practice Centers serving a five-county region, died over the weekend. He was 67.
Friends who reportedly tried to reach him by phone on Friday and Saturday went to his house in Mifflinburg, where they found him lying on the floor. The cause of death has not yet been determined.
“This was a shock to everyone who knew him,” said Dr. Domenick Ronco on Monday.
Born in Lock Haven, Fasano began his professional career as a pharmacist. He received his degree from Temple University in 1963. Five years later, he earned a medical degree from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine.
He met his wife, Rhoda, a Mifflinburg resident, in Lewisburg.
Fasano started a medical practice in Mifflinburg in 1973. In 1980, he and Ronco initiated a joint practice, which grew into the concept of Family Practice Centers.
“After Mifflinburg, we opened an office in Mount Pleasant Mills,” Ronco recalled. “And then we kept expanding. It developed pretty fast. We obviously filled a need. One of Charles’ goals was to bring the highest level of care to the rural areas of central Pennsylvania. He was also very proud that the practice was at the forefront of technology in the Valley.”
There are now 38 doctors in 21 Family Practice Center locations in Snyder, Union, Northumberland, Dauphin, Perry and Lycoming counties.
Fasano’s colleagues remember his ability to make life better for others, his sense of humor and an indefatigable commitment to his patients.
That commitment, however, did not take him away from his family in Mifflinburg, something that still amazes daughter Maria Bhangdia.
“He was very dedicated to work and to his patients,” Bhangdia said. “You know how people say he was a great doctor? He was a more awesome father. He was an amazing role model for me, my sister, Carol, and my brother, Charles.
“He always had big dreams and was always there for us. I don’t know how he balanced it all. I can’t think of a single moment in our lives when he wasn’t there for us.”
Besides his passion for his patients and his family, Fasano was also remembered for his sense of humor, a trait he kept until the end.
“My dad always loved learning,” Bhangdia added. “He encouraged all three of us to chart our own course, not to necessarily follow in his footsteps but to follow what we were passionate about. That’s what pushed me in my own direction.”
Bhangdia is a pathologist at Evangelical Community Hospital in Lewisburg. Charles Fasano is an emergency room doctor at a hospital in Philadelphia, and Carol Gruber works for Merck Pharmaceuticals.
“He was very proud of his family,” Bhangdia continued. “No matter what we did.”
He was also proud to have been a mentor to so many physicians who came into the area.
“He exemplified what it is to be an ideal physician; he was a role model that centered everything around his patients,” said Dr. Hank Yavorek, a general surgeon who knew Fasano for 18 years.
Yavorek practices surgery at Sunbury Community Hospital, Evangelical Community Hospital and Shamokin Area Community Hospital.
“I was a resident when I first met Chuck,” Yavorek said. “He was like a father figure to a lot of physicians in the area. He was someone you could always turn to for good, solid, no-nonsense advice, whether it was medical advice, hospital politics or a business problem.”
Yavorek called him the founding father of primary care groups in this area.
“He was an innovator,” he said. “He had a vision, and he had a good nose for business.
“He was an individual who only comes along once in a lifetime. I’m a general surgeon. He was a general practitioner, but I could bounce ideas off him. It didn’t matter what specialties we practiced. You could always count on Chuck.”
News
Doctor remembered for dedication, humor
- News
-
-
State police probe murder-suicide near Watsontown
WATSONTOWN - An 85-year-old Watsontown man shot and killed a 69-year-old female companion then turned the gun on himself Tuesday afternoon, state police at Milton report.
-
2 Valley schools in top 5.5% in nation
LEWISBURG — U.S. News & World Report magazine has ranked Lewisburg Area as the 15th-best academic high school in Pennsylvania and the 803rd best in the nation, according to a report released earlier this month.
-
Northumberland opts to build sewage plant
NORTHUMBERLAND — Ending months of speculation, the Northumberland Sewer Authority has voted to build a water treatment plant, at an estimated cost of $9 million, to replace the 40-year-old sewage plant at 100 Water St.
-
Mifflinburg school board OKs millage increase
MIFFLINBURG — The Mifflinburg school board Tuesday night approved raising the property tax rate to the maximum allowed under the index, equaling about a $30 increase a year for the average taxpayer.
-
Support grows for city garden
SUNBURY— More than a month after several Bucknell University students resurrected an empty city lot by transforming the land into a full-size garden, neighbors, nearby residents and now business leaders from outside Sunbury have decided to chip in by donating seeds and planting tools in order to spruce up the corner lot.
-
Stat of the Day: 21,776
Stat of the day: 21,776. That's the number of high schools evaluated nationwide by U.S. News & World Report, after which the magazine determined that Lewisburg Area High was the 803rd best in the U.S., and Selinsgrove Area, 1,187th.
-
State House approves sales-tax exemption for airplanes
HARRISBURG — A bill to exempt the purchase and maintenance of airplanes from Pennsylvania's 6 percent sales tax won a strong vote of confidence in the state House of Representatives.
-
State lawmakers consider takeover of struggling school districts
HARRISBURG — A Republican-penned bill that would pave the way for state takeovers of Pennsylvania school districts veering toward financial collapse has the support of Gov. Tom Corbett and is advancing in the Legislature.
-
Take Me Home: Yip
Yip is a young dog, best guess is Bichon/Daschund. He is friendly and loves everyone, especially anyone who will rub his belly or let him on their lap for some doggie kisses. He enjoys car rides, has done well around other dogs, cats, and kids. Housebreaking and crate training are in the works.
-
Joe Paterno earned $13.4 million pension at Penn State
STATE COLLEGE — Joe Paterno earned a state pension of $13.4 million for his 61-year coaching career at Penn State.
-
Police Log 05.22.12
A roundup of police news reported by departments across the Central Susquehanna Valley.
-
Montour County judge dismisses flooding lawsuit
DANVILLE — A Montour County judge has dismissed a case brought against Mahoning Township by residents of the Gaytowne subdivision.
- More News Headlines
-
State police probe murder-suicide near Watsontown



