A hospital that changes its skin to save lives
After two years with closed doors, the ‘La Pastora’ General Hospital in Gustavo A. Madero today launches an identity and a critical mission. The Head of Government, Clara Brugada, and President Claudia Sheinbaum inaugurated it as the new Oncology Hospital for Women.
Sheinbaum didn’t just cut the ribbon. He launched a more ambitious idea: replicate this model in other parts of the country. A move that transcends the local and points to a national health strategy.
The figures behind the urgency
Brugada put on the table the raw data that justifies this transformation: in Mexico City, 20 out of every 100 women die from breast cancer. Faced with that, he declared that this center “will play a fundamental role” in prevention and care.
“If we guarantee health, that women have access to health, we protect not only a person, but a family, a community and the entire country,”
Brugada said, connecting individual health with collective well-being.
The bet includes specific tools. The capital administration has acquired 40 new mammograms out of a goal of 100, with which they plan to perform half a million mammograms. They are numbers that seek to translate discourse into early detection.
Its recent history is a reflection of the times: inaugurated as a Covid-19 hospital in the midst of the health crisis in 2021, it closed in 2024 to be reborn with a different approach. Today, ‘La Pastora’ does not fight against a global virus, but against a silent enemy that takes lives right here. The political theater has a new stage, and the protagonists are them.




