In this paper, a cooperative two-hop communication scheme, together with opportunistic relaying (OR), is applied within a mobile wireless body area network (WBAN). Its effectiveness in interference mitigation is investigated in a scenario where there are multiple closely-located networks. Due to a typical WBAN's nature, no coordination is used among different WBANs. A suitable time-division-multiple-access (TDMA) scheme is adopted as both an intra-network and also an internetwork access scheme. Extensive on-body and off-body channel gain measurements are employed to gauge performance, which are overlaid to simulate a realistic WBAN working environment. It is found that opportunistic relaying is able to improve the signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) performance at an outage probability of 10% by an average of 5 dB, and it is also shown that it can reduce level crossing rate (LCR) significantly at low SINRs. Furthermore, this scheme is more efficient when on-body channels fade more rapidly.