Mobile Health Clinic Program

Regular visits to the doctor are a key component of disease prevention, but in communities with limited access to healthcare, unreliable transportation and a lack of health insurance prevent many people from seeing a doctor at all. BBF’s Mobile Health Clinic Program eliminates the obstacles between the patient and the exam chair by bringing the exam chair directly to the patient.

The program launched in 2022 in response to an unmet need for specialized eye care in our home city of Pittsburgh. After partnering with local ophthalmologists and running several successful clinics, we began addressing the overwhelming healthcare needs in underserved communities throughout the United States. To date, BBF has donated four mobile health vans to healthcare organizations that are providing accessible healthcare services in three states.

The impact of our work has provided unhoused patients with specialty eye care, ensured students receive eye exams and prescription glasses before starting a new school year and prevented countless others from falling through the cracks of our healthcare system.

How the Program Works

  • BBF analyzes data and assesses community needs.
  • Drawing from our extensive nationwide network of partner organizations, we connect with health care organizations well-equipped with the staffing necessary to extend high-quality care to underserved regions.
  • Healthcare providers communicate what medical equipment they need to best serve communities, and BBF provides funding and logistical support to install these specialized tools in vehicles.
  • We donate the new and fully-equipped mobile health van to the healthcare organization, so doctors can host health clinics in underserved communities and provide high-quality care to patients at an affordable or free cost.

Mobile Health Clinic

The BBF Mobile Health program aims to eliminate healthcare barriers in underserved communities. Vans are outfitted with specialized medical equipment and provide at-risk populations with quality care at no cost to the patient. Mobile Health Clinics play a crucial role in improving healthcare access, promoting health equity, and addressing disparities in healthcare delivery. To date, BBF has funded four mobile clinics: two in the Pittsburgh area, one in western Kentucky, and one in Palm Beach County, Florida.

BBF's first mobile health van-the EyeVan-was donated to the Eye and Ear Foundation of Pittsburgh in March 2023. In the first year, the van helped enable healthcare providers to reach more than 850 people and prescribe more than 750 pairs of eyeglasses.

Calendar Icon
MARCH

2023

BBF's first mobile
health van was donated

People Icon
850+

PEOPLE

reached since
launch

Glasses Icon
750+

PAIRS

of eyeglasses
prescribed

Mobile Clinic Map Infographic Bcknd With Map
2

MOBILE
HEALTH VANS

donated to AHN and the
Eye and Ear Foundation in
the Pittsburgh area

1

MOBILE
HEALTH VAN

donated to KentuckyCare
in western Kentucky

1

MOBILE
HEALTH VAN

donated to Caridad
Center in West Palm
Beach County, Florida

Pittsburgh, PA

Our first eye van was donated to the Eye and Ear Foundation of Pittsburgh and has supported and expanded the services being provided by Guerilla Eye Service (GES), a group of volunteer eye doctors and medical students who travel to underserved areas in the Greater Pittsburgh region.

Prior to receiving the mobile health clinic, GES transported eye equipment in a 2006 minivan and relied on local facilities as places to provide care. By operating from a mobile health van, GES has been able to provide care to remote and often overlooked communities such as homeless encampments.

“When you’re trying to overcome food security and housing security issues, trying to get back on your feet, get a job – you need to be able to see.”

- Dr. Evan Waxman, Director, UPMC Vision Institute Mercy; Founder, Guerilla Eye Service

EyeVan Group Sm
EyeVan Clinic
Mobile Health Clinic Newsletter September 2022-min

Pittsburgh, PA

BBF Global Relief donated a mobile health van to AHN to support the organization’s growing initiatives to provide high-quality healthcare in underserved communities throughout the Pittsburgh region. The van was unveiled at ribbon-cutting ceremony held at BBF’s warehouse in April 2024.  

Healthcare providers have used the van to provide high school students with sports physicals, eliminating barriers that prevent many students from participating in after-school sports. The van has also played a role at community events by helping healthcare workers conduct biometric screenings.  

“Unfortunately, there are students in the region who do not participate in sports just because sports physicals may be a barrier for them, and it’s just easier to not participate than it is to get the physical. By bringing the physical to them, we can really increase sports participation rates”    

 - Michael Talotta, PA, Allegheny Health Network 

Palm Beach County, Florida

Palm Beach County may have a wealthy reputation, but there is substantial inequity when it comes to healthcare accessibility. Caridad Center is one of the largest free health clinics in Florida and operates a team of more than 700 volunteer health care providers who provide free medical care to uninsured Palm Beach County residents living at or below 200% of the federal poverty line.

With their new mobile health van, doctors have extended the services offered at their eye clinic in Boynton Beach to county residents who don’t have the means to visit on site.

We serve all sectors of our community that need us, from all corners of this county. For many of them, transportation is the number one barrier to access to care.”

- Laura Callus, CEO, Caridad Center

Western Kentucky

BBF began partnering with KentuckyCare following the deadly tornadoes that ripped through western Kentucky in December 2021. A Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC), KentuckyCare provides low-income residents with an expansive range of affordable health care services that include everything from immunizations and nutritional health to cardiology and chronic disease management.

BBF donated a mobile heath van to KentuckyCare in the fall of 2023 to help the organization expand their primary care services into rural areas without healthcare facilities. The versatility afforded by mobile health vans will also allow medical providers to adapt to changing needs in these communities, such as those that that may occur in the wake of future disasters.

The organization has used the van to host clinics in parking lots of community kitchens and schools. In October, Breast Cancer Awareness Month, healthcare providers are planning to use the mobile health van to host a mammogram outreach event.

While continuing to raise funds for additional MHCs, BBF’s goal is to develop this program in collaboration with implementation partners and potential funders in Pittsburgh and across the nation.

The basis for BBF’s strategy to address health inequities lies in the research report titled Addressing Unmet Healthcare Needs in SWPA (Southwest Pennsylvania)