Kelly Melear-Hough ’88 brings health services to vulnerable Tennessee residents
 Imagine going to see your doctor in the middle of a tomato farm where  card tables and folding chairs serve as makeshift exam areas. That  sight is an oasis for migrant farm workers in rural Tennessee who  otherwise would have no access to health services.
Imagine going to see your doctor in the middle of a tomato farm where  card tables and folding chairs serve as makeshift exam areas. That  sight is an oasis for migrant farm workers in rural Tennessee who  otherwise would have no access to health services.
Kelly Melear-Hough ’88, operations director at Rural Medical  Services in Newport, Tenn., prides herself on helping underserved  populations break through health care barriers.
“I go out with the team, and we provide free medical services,”  explains Melear-Hough, who has been involved with the migrant health  program since 1991 and served as its director for six years. “We’re  located in Cocke County, which has a big tomato farm that employs over  300 migrant workers in July, August, and September. We’re considered a  migrant stream — most that we see will go back to Florida for the  winter months or back to Mexico. This past Tuesday night, we had a nurse  practitioner and family practice physician as well as support staff. We  actually see patients in the field and they can be seen for any type of  problem they have. But our ability to provide services on site is  limited because we only have what we can carry out there with us. We try  to familiarize the migrant community with our services and where our  clinics are located.”
Helping non-English-speaking people navigate U.S. health care has  been a pivotal part of Melear-Hough’s career journey. Before she was  even employed, she spent time with Spanish speakers and accompanied them  to clinics to act as a translator with health care providers. Her first  job was as an outreach worker for the East Coast Migrant Health Project  (now Farmworker Health Services), which fit her ability to speak  Spanish and interest in helping others.
In 2002, she received the Tennessee Primary Care Association’s  Charles E. Darling Award for outstanding achievement in organizing,  delivering, and/or financing health services to vulnerable populations.  Melear-Hough’s work isn’t only idealistic; she has seen tangible  results.
She helped add a second Rural Medical Services bilingual clinic,  allowing RMS to serve 25 percent more patients. She wrote the grant  proposal that brought federal funding to hire more practitioners and  expand the number of exam rooms. Of the three grant proposals she’s  worked on this year, she has received funding for two with the third  still out.
Melear-Hough also helped spearhead a breast-health outreach project  funded by the Komen for the Cure foundation for the last three years.
“We provide two health fairs, one in Newport and the other, which  targets the Hispanic community, in Morristown,” she says. “One of our  employees used to organize those fairs with me and she was involved with  the mobile mammography company that would come out and do that for us.  We also had invited the Komen affiliate to come and be part of our  health fair and just provide information. The Komen foundation  approached us and told us to apply for a grant, so I wrote the grant and  designed a project where we would provide education and free mammograms  to uninsured women between the ages of 40-49. We provide 170 mammograms  per year for women who otherwise would not get those mammograms, and we  found two breast cancers, which is two lives that may have been saved  for having early detection and treatment. We also provide education to  literally thousands of people each year with outreach workers teaching  people about screening, monthly exams, and getting yearly physicals.”
Good mentors, small class sizes, and the opportunity to spend a  semester in Spain her junior year made Lafayette a perfect fit for the  anthropology and sociology graduate. Melear-Hough says her semester  abroad made her fluent in Spanish, a skill she uses every day on the  job.
“Learning how to write had a big impact on me and my ability to move  up in the organization because now I’m a grant writer,” she says. “I’m  able to bring in money to provide services to more people. Susan  Niles, professor of anthropology, was a wonderful mentor for me and  encouraged me to pursue anthropology. We had small classes so I got a  lot of individual attention.”