coverage, this is the lumpy ground on which to make it, a gravel lot in which upward of three thousand Appalachians camp out for days in 100-degree heat to be treated in exam rooms cobbled together from bedsheets and clothespins. Behind a banner for the virginia-kentucky district fair & horse show, patients wait in bleachers while volunteers pass out bottles of water as they triage them to pop-up clinics for medical, dental, and eye care.
I interviewed Tyson several times in the spring and summer of 2017, before and after the July RAM event that her organization helps plan and host. In the weeks leading up to it, she liaised with media from as far away as Holland and made frantic phone calls, once when her assistant struck out trying to secure enough bottled water for the RAM crowds. A nonprofit they usually counted on said this year’s pallets were already reserved for natural-disaster relief. “If this isn’t a disaster, I don’t know what is!” Tyson said, managing to sound both desperate and upbeat.
In rural America, where overdose rates are still 50 percent higher than in urban areas, the Third World disaster imagery is apt, although the state of health of RAM patients was actually far worse. “In Central America, they’re eating beans and rice and walking everywhere,” a volunteer doctor told the New York Times reporter sent to cover the event. “They’re not drinking Mountain Dew and eating candy. They’re not having an epidemic of obesity and diabetes and lung cancer.”
I had made a similar comparison two years before, when Art Van Zee drove me through the coal camps on my first visit to Lee County, just west of Wise. Though I’d covered immigration in rural Mexico and the cholera epidemic in northern Haiti, I told him, never before had I witnessed desolation at this scale, less than four hours from my house. Most of America would be shocked by the caved-in structures, with their cracked windows and Confederate flags, and burned-out houses that nobody bothered to board up or tear down. It felt completely out of scale with the rest of the nation I knew. But these conditions were hardly limited to St. Charles or Wise County, Van Zee pointed out. “On the other side of the cities [many Americans] live in, there’s poverty and poor health probably just as bad,” he said.
In Appalachia, he conceded, poverty and poor health were not only harder to camouflage; they were increasingly harder to recover from. For decades, black poverty had been concentrated in urban zones, a by-product of earlier inner-city deindustrialization, racial segregation, and urban renewal projects of the 1950s and 1960s that decimated black neighborhoods and made them natural markets for heroin and cocaine.
Whites had historically been more likely to live in spread-out settings that were less marred by social problems, but in much of rural America that was clearly no longer the case. These were the same counties where Donald Trump performed best in the 2016 election—the places with the most economic distress and the highest rates of drug, alcohol, and suicide mortality.
The national media’s collective jaw-dropping at the enormity of needs displayed at the RAM event underscored the fact that the outside world had zero clue. As the Appalachian writer and health care administrator Wendy Welch noted: “We’re not victims here, except for when it comes to Purdue Pharma. But when one of us makes a mistake, it tends to be a fatal one.”
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I found hope in the stories of Tyson’s staff and patients as I set out, in multiple visits, to discern what happened after the volunteer doctors departed for their urban enclaves, and the politicians and pundits went home. I felt hope as I witnessed Tyson, a bubbly, every-curl-in-place blonde, manage her workaday free clinic as she seamlessly steered her rattling 2001 Winnebago through southwest Virginia’s serpentine roads, juggling phone calls from nurses, patients, and the media alike—in high-heeled, rhinestone-studded sandals. With her sorghum-thick accent, Tyson was camera-ready and thoroughly put together each time we met, except once, when mascara smudged her doctor’s coat.
I would find out soon enough why she’d been crying for days, and it wasn’t because the battery on her Winnebago had just conked out. (The nonprofit’s marketing manager was dispatched with the battery booster to give us a jump, while Tyson’s husband offered real-time jump-starting counsel via FaceTime.)
It was a fitting state of affairs for what happens after the out-of-state RAM do-gooders depart and Tyson’s grant-funded Health Wagon staff of twenty is