6 • Walmart Shareholders • 2022
This undated photo provided by Walmart via Plenty, shows the Plenty Farms South San Francisco grow room. Plenty says its vertical towers can grow multiple crops on one
platform with consistent flavor and deliver higher yields per acre compared to that of a field. Walmart said Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2022, it has taken a stake in agriculture startup
Plenty, becoming the first large U.S. retailer to significantly invest in indoor vertical farming as a way to deliver fresher produce to its stores. (Spencer Lowell/Plenty/Courtesy
of Walmart via AP)
Athletes who need the expertise of the state's
largest fellowship-trained orthopaedic team can
find it right here in Northwest Arkansas. UAMS
Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, led by ortho-
paedic surgeon Wesley Cox, M.D., offers compre-
hensive specialty care unlike any in the area.
"From adults to pediatric patients, our aim is to
offer the most up-to-date techniques to treat your
orthopaedic and sports medicine needs in a way
that makes you feel like you are our only patient,"
Cox said. "From the moment you walk through our
doors, you will feel the difference."
The group's fellowship-trained surgeons, phy-
sicians and therapists are recognized nationally
and internationally for their specialty expertise,
advanced treatment techniques and exceptional
outcomes. Whether you visit their offices in Fay-
etteville and Lowell or see one of their providers
at Arkansas Children's Northwest, you will get the
best care this region has to offer.
You will be seen, heard and cared for by the
same team that serves as the official orthopaedics
and sports medicine provider for all 19 Arkansas
Razorbacks sports programs. This is in addition
to providing sports medicine coverage for the
other UA campuses (University of Arkansas at
Little Rock, University of Arkansas at Monticello
and University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff), as well
as numerous high schools in Northwest Arkansas
through a partnership with Arkansas Children's
Northwest.
"Our goal is to deliver personalized, world-
class orthopaedic specialty care as we continue
to add specialists and expand our programs and
clinics to meet the needs of the community," Cox
said, noting a plan to build a 115,000-square-
foot orthopaedics and sports medicine surgery
center and sports performance facility in the area.
"We look forward to growing with Northwest
Arkansas."
Rounding out this team of highly trained sur-
geons and sports medicine experts is the UAMS
rehabilitation and sports performance team at
Train, Recover, Move (TRM). The TRM team,
which serves world-class athletes and Olympians,
works closely with the highly engaged group of
physicians to develop new approaches and better
solutions that improve healing, speed rehabilita-
tion and enhance patient outcomes.
"At TRM, we pride ourselves on being able to
offer our patients a one-on-one interaction with
their physical therapist each and every time they
walk in the doors," said physical therapist and
athletic trainer Andy Glidewell, DPT, ATC. "We
want to develop a relationship with you. Regard-
less of what you have going on, we just want to
help you along in your path to recovery in the best
manner possible. We look for the right way to do
it. We want you to train with passion, recover with
intention, and move with purpose."
According to Glidewell, TRM is an experience
that gives its clients a unique ability to be in an
environment that encourages and promotes
well-being by providing an individualized, tailored
approach to recovery or performance enhance-
ment.
"We take a very scientific and medical ap-
proach to it whether it be general fitness, biome-
chanics or general rehab," he said.
Arkansas' Top Athletes – and Weekend
Warriors – Deserve the State's Best
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine Team
SPONSOR CONTENT