Inside a bus, East Texans get the health care they can’t afford or find anywhere else

Anita Drake, a nurse practitioner, conducts an appointment with Shelly Huffman at a mobile health clinic in Kirbyville on Oct. 17.

Credit:
Callaghan O’Hare for The Texas Tribune

Melissa Forward, a medical assistant, walks toward a mobile health unit that operates three days a week, providing preventive health care to outlying areas of East Texas. Kirbyville is one of hundreds of towns in Texas where access to health care is limited.

Credit:
Callaghan O’Hare for The Texas Tribune

Rural counties struggle for health access

Dena Hughes, the CEO of TAN Healthcare, in Kirbyville on Oct. 17. “We’re not supposed to be making tons of money — we’re supposed to be putting money back into the system,” Hughes said of the clinic’s nonprofit economic model.

Credit:
Callaghan O’Hare for The Texas Tribune

Providing compassionate care

After visiting TAN Healthcare as a patient, Lyndon Hallmark started working the clinic’s front desk and more recently took over its mobile unit.

Credit:
Callaghan O’Hare for The Texas Tribune