The Phnom Penh Post

‘Recycles’ help shield Mexico health workers from stigma

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DANIELA Chavez, a doctor, took up cycling to work after she felt discrimina­ted against by a taxi driver.

Her bicycle was a gift from activists who have been rounding up bicycles – dubbed by one organisati­on as ‘recycles’

– to donate to healthcare workers in Mexico City, in a bid to protect them from being stigmatise­d for looking after patients with Covid-19.

Chavez said that as soon as she climbed inside the cab after a hard day at a public hospital, the driver asked if she was a doctor and where she worked.

Fearful she would suffer an aggressive response if she told him, as some colleagues have, the 26-year-old decided to get out instead.

“I don’t know if it’s psychosis!

We know we’re people at risk, we always have been, but now that people discrimina­te against us for doing a dignified profession it’s unpreceden­ted,” she said.

As the Sars-CoV-2 coronaviru­s spread in Mexico, health care workers faced physical aggression on top of suspicion by people who viewed them as sources of infection.

But in April, two cycling organisati­ons came to their help, launching an initiative on social media inviting people to donate unused bicycles or spare parts to be given to healthcare workers.

Simultaneo­usly, Bicitekas and Alcaldia de la Bicicleta invited health care workers to apply online to receive a bicycle.

‘Depressing’

At their workshop in the central neighbourh­ood of La Escandon, between pedals, wheels and saddles, a group of activists spend 20 hours a week repairing and assembling bicycles.

The initiative is also aimed at reducing the risk of doctors and nurses infecting people while using public transport in the city of more than 15 million.

“At the start of this outbreak we asked ourselves what we could do to support healthcare personnel who were being discrimina­ted against on their journeys, and unfortunat­ely, attacked due to their profession,” said Agustin Martinez, the founder of Bicitekas.

T h e o r g a n i s a t i o n h a s received 240 requests for a ‘recycle’, or ‘recicleta’ – a portmantea­u of the Spanish words for ‘recycle’ and ‘bicycle’, as its bikes are called. So far they have delivered around 50.

For Di a na Garduno, a 30-year-old nurse, it was a welcome boon as her bike was stolen in a burglary.

She says she’s been afraid since one of her colleagues was doused with a hot drink while walking in the street.

“It’s depressing how we give everything for a patient to be well and once we’re outside we suffer this type of aggression,” said Garduno.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) director for Mexico and Central America Loic Jaeger said these attacks were taking place in a context of “the normalisat­ion of violence” that spills over from organised crime.

“If we had more knowledge, there wouldn’t be these kind of actions against healthcare workers,” added Diego Villafuert­e, 23, an intern in a private clinic who has received a bike.

‘A healthy distance’

On Monday, Mexico began the reopening of “essential” sectors of its industry, including mining, aviation, constructi­on and the manufactur­e of transport equipment, following more than two months of lockdown.

The country of 127 million people has recorded more than 11,700 deaths and more than 101,000 coronaviru­s cases.

Under the easing of virus restrictio­ns, Mexico City has also allowed the sale of bicycles, the mode of transport celebrated internatio­nally on Wednesday in an annual event inaugurate­d by the UN in 2018.

The Mobility Secretaria­t is due to build 54km of cycle lanes to help give some of the five million people who used the metro every day before lockdown another option.

That will hopefully reduce the spread of Covid-19, while adding to the 88km that already exist in Mexico.

The long-term aim reach 600km by 2024.

With the bicycle “you can keep a healthy distance, it’s not infectious”, said the secretaria­t’s chief Andres Lajous. is to

 ?? AFP ?? Living in a society which casts suspicious eyes on medical workers, doctor Daniela Chavez now bicycles to work to avoid discrimina­tion.
AFP Living in a society which casts suspicious eyes on medical workers, doctor Daniela Chavez now bicycles to work to avoid discrimina­tion.

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