“When I Said ‘Yes’ Without Knowing What Awaited Me” – Dr. Ana Sofía Téllez

Article published at: Feb 12, 2025
All Stories from medical staff

I received a call at three in the morning. It was from Civil Protection: “There’s a landslide at a mining camp, we need urgent medical support.” I was doing my undergraduate internship in Zacatecas, and without hesitation, I said “yes.”

They took us in trucks to a mountainous area. Total darkness. Rain. People shouting. Men covered in mud searching for their companions. There was no hospital nearby, just a tent and a table. I was assigned to stabilize the rescued.

I had never felt so much fear… nor so much responsibility. One of the miners had an open fracture on his leg, and all I had were gauzes, painkillers, and a flashlight. We both trembled. I took his hand, looked into his eyes, and said, “I’m with you. We’re going to do this right.”

I spent eight hours there. I wasn’t a surgeon or an intensivist. I was human. I cleaned wounds, held a child who was asking if his dad was going to come back.

Sometimes, medicine is learned outside the hospital. That day I discovered that being a doctor isn’t just about diagnosing. It’s about not turning your back when you’re needed, even if you’re not ready. Because no one ever is… until the moment arrives.

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