In their last words, the weight of a life

Article published at: Apr 14, 2026
En sus últimas palabras, el peso de una vida
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Andrea found her calling almost by accident. Today, she cares for the youngest patients with the same empathy she learned from a patient who is no longer here.


Andrea Manzanares · @andreamanzzNurse · IMSS · Child School Health


The beginning

No one arrives in nursing exactly as they planned. Neither did Andrea. In high school, between family pressure and the uncertainties of her age, she made a decision almost by elimination: she wanted something related to health, but not the endless years of medicine. She chose nursing almost without thinking too much. What she didn't know is that this choice would lead her exactly where she needed to be.


Today's work

Andrea is currently part of a team hired by the IMSS to provide child school health: they visit schools, measure visual acuity, check oral health, and offer that first level of care that many children would not receive otherwise. It's a discreet, silent job, but one that leaves a mark.


The story she can't forget

There was a patient who was hospitalized for weeks. Andrea was his nurse, until she was transferred to another service and he continued to deteriorate in another ward. Weeks later, when she no longer expected to hear from him, his family appeared. The patient had left a message in his last words: he wanted to thank her. He wanted them to know that she had made a difference.

"I've always said that a patient remembering you is very gratifying. To be able to impact someone's life so much... I think that's everything to me."

That clash of emotions—gratitude, loss, purpose—is what Andrea describes as the most significant moment of her career. And also the reason why every morning she asks her patients: how are you feeling today?


What keeps her going

No coffee, no complicated formulas. Andrea has two rituals: eating on time and getting eight hours of sleep when she can. Simple, human, honest. Because to take good care of others, you first have to take care of yourself.


The future she imagines

In ten years, she sees herself as a staff nurse at the IMSS, with a surgical specialty. The operating room attracts her: the precision, the concentration, that space where every second matters. She also imagines herself with a family, a dog, and the satisfaction of being able to tell her children: "we made it."


Her advice for newcomers

Don't give up, even if your path is different from others. You don't always progress at the same pace, and that's okay. If you persist in what you truly want, it will come. Things happen when they are meant to happen — and sometimes what seems like an obstacle is exactly the lesson you needed.


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