Thursday, April 3, 2025

Therapist cheers up staff, patients with his guitar at Mexico City Covid ward

They say that laughter is the best medicine, but in Mexico City’s Juárez Hospital, psychologist Javier Coss is using the power of his guitar to serenade patients, doctors, and staff in the Covid-19 ward with classic songs to reduce stress levels.

“I carry my guitar with me, and I play music for the doctors, for the nurses, for the patients in the hallway because it’s a way in which I can … change the tense atmosphere, and if possible, give them a moment of contemplation.”

Coss’s song selection varies from Cuban singer-songwriter Silvio Rodríguez to the international pop-rock band Caifanes. Staff apparently appreciate the value of his music therapy: at one point, he said, a nurse asked to borrow his guitar so she could play a song while Coss sang along, “so that she could just ease her stress a bit and connect with herself,” he said. 

Coss, part of a team of psychologists assisting the staff and patients with psychological counseling, has worked at the hospital for three years. In addition to providing therapeutic assistance and music performances, he and his team also manage patients’ communication with their families via videoconferencing calls. He sees it all as part of a package of strategies to keep patients’ motivation up as they try to recover from an illness that isolates them from everyone.

“We have to achieve this emotional closeness with the patients because somehow or other we must keep them motivated,” he said.

A hospital worker listens as Coss entertains staff and patients.
A hospital worker listens as Coss entertains staff and patients.

Hospital Juárez is one of the nation’s biggest hospitals. On a daily basis, it attends to hundreds of Covid-19 patients. Despite having seen a recent decrease in coronavirus patients, the medical and administrative staff have been working through Mexico City’s worst pandemic and many are suffering from chronic stress and burnout.

Coss himself is not immune. When he began working in the Covid-19 ward, he was scared. He had to completely change the way he dressed and wear gloves, two or three layers of masks, and a shield. Outside of work he has had to change his socialization patterns — not seeing his parents and reducing his interactions with his children. But once he felt he could safely enter the ward with adequate protection, he began to lose his fear.

He says he now feels proud to be working at the hospital because it’s made him realize the importance and interconnectedness of each of the hospital’s departments. Before the pandemic, he said, he thought of all the staff as being in their own isolated spheres doing their own tasks but all are in fact connected and integrated.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum stands at the presidential podium looking out at an audience off-camera with her fist raised and her mouth open as if cheering. Behind her is a wall with the words in Spanish: Plan Mexico, Strenghtening the Economy and Well-Being, Mexico City April 3, 2025.

Sheinbaum unveils an even more ambitious version of her transformative Plan México

3
Sheinbaum said the projects she announced as part of Plan México will bring about more well-paid employment, less poverty and inequality, greater investment and production and more innovation.
A clear-cut strip of land cuts through the jungle along the Maya Train route in Yucatán

Government promises restoration plan for Maya Train environmental damage

1
Government officials said the track's builders will be responsible for funding a restoration effort that includes reforestation and improving natural migration corridors.
Cans of Cororna Extra beer lying on a bed of large ice cubes

Trump announces new US tariffs on Mexican… beer

15
Mexico didn't end up on Donald Trump's "liberation day" list of enemy countries, although the U.S. did impose tariffs on a surprising Mexican item: beer in cans.