By Stephen Smoot
One of the major challenges of rural health care lies in barriers to access. For a long time, overcoming those meant finding ways to get the patients from home to health care.
In recent years, that dynamic has reversed. Increasingly health care, within reasonable limits, can come as close as possible to one’s home. For example Potomac Highlands Guild, which serves several counties in that region of the state, has started offering virtual mental health services from mobile units.
WVU Medicine has also pioneered bringing health care services on mobile physical platforms, like the LUCAS lung cancer screening facility and Bonnie’s Bus, equipped with breast cancer screening equipment.
WVU Medicine offers a bus calendar for both Bonnie’s Bus and LUCAS. Scheduling is already set through the end of 2026.
Later this month, Bonnie’s Bus will visit Shinnston on the 25th, Salem on Dec 18 and May 27, 2026, and Clarksburg on May 15. Its lung cancer screening mate LUCAS will come to West Milford on May 6 and 7, as well as Shinnston on June 11.
The story of Bonnie’s Bus opens with that of Bonnie Wells Wilson. Her story, unfortunately, is shared by all too many men and women alike in different areas of West Virginia. Often, enjoying the benefits of a rural lifestyle comes with the sacrifice of long distances to needed services.
Because Wilson had difficulty in accessing preventative screenings that could have diagnosed her in time, she passed from breast cancer. Her daughter, Jo Statler, and son-in-law Ben worked to make sure that Bonnie Wells’ story would not be repeated as often going forward.
In 2009, the Statler family donated funds to establish Bonnie’s Bus. As WVU Medicine shared online “the bus provides mammograms to women in a comfortable, convenient environment.” Those with private insurance, Medicaid, or Medicare can access screening. So too can those who participate in the West Virginia Breast and Cervical Cancer screening program. This program, operated by the West Virginia Department of Health, “helps low-income, uninsured or underinsured women gain access to breast and cervical cancer screening services.”
“Uninsured patients who are age 40 and older can receive a screening mammogram on the bus through the generosity of grant funding and donations,” stated the WVU Medicine website on the mobile facility.
Said Hannah Hazard-Jenkins, M.D., director of the WVU Cancer Institute, Jean and Laurence DeLynn Chair of Oncology, and associate professor of surgery at the WVU School of Medicine, at a recent Bonnie’s Bus fundraising event, “I have the distinct honor of witnessing the tremendous work of Bonnie’s Bus from two vantage points as the director of the WVU Cancer Institute, I see the profound impact Bonnie’s Bus has on raising awareness, educating about early detection, and meeting our goal of providing lifesaving care to some of the more remote places in our state,”
“But additionally, I am witness to the lifesaving work of Bonnie’s Bus as I treat women who have been diagnosed as a result of screening mammograms done on the unit.”
In 17 years of operation, Bonnie’s Bus has provided more than 33,000 screenings and diagnosed approximately 200 cases of cancer. As in most cancers, early detection serves as the most important factor in overcoming the disease and recovering.
Bonnie’s Bus staff work to get the facility on the road regularly to visit remote and rural areas of the state with underserved populations. In 2024, it traveled 26,420 miles to 46 counties, screened 4,404 patients, and provided approximately $48,000 in mammograms and also LUCAS lung screenings.
Plans are also underway to launch Bonnie’s Bus Two to cover more communities and needs, hopefully next year.