Why choosing a Hospital can change everything
When you need medical care, the first thing you look for is a good doctor. Someone with experience, confidence, humanity. And that's fine. But what we sometimes forget is that that doctor, on his or her own, could not do much without a supportive, supportive hospital environment and the right conditions to heal.
Choosing the right hospital is as important as choosing the right doctor. Because a hospital is not just a building with beds: it is a network of people, processes, equipment and protocols that work - day and night - to save your life.
What does a hospital do for you?
Behind every procedure, surgery or consultation, there is a precise machinery that must function with excellence. A hospital takes care of you when:
- It ensures a safe and clean infrastructure, with operating rooms, intensive care units and emergency teams ready to act.
- Implements safety, sterilization, traceability and infection control protocols.
- It has trained nurses who care for you with knowledge and empathy.
- It has administrative staff, orderlies, technicians and operatives who make it possible for everything to flow, even if you don't see them.
- It offers state-of-the-art medical technology that allows for accurate diagnoses and more precise treatments.
- It is prepared for emergencies, with immediate response 24 hours a day.
- It supports you with a multidisciplinary team (anesthesiologists, radiologists, intensivists, etc.) that works together with your trusted physician.
A good doctor needs a good hospital
Many patients come to a hospital because their doctor recommends them. And that's fine: doctors know the settings that best support them. But the patient also has the right to make his or her own conscientious and informed choice.
The physician is the one who traces the path, but the hospital is the terrain where that path is traveled.
Choosing Hospitales Joya means choosing support, safety and humanity.
At Joya Hospitals, we believe that caring for people goes far beyond alleviating illness. Our mission is to create an environment where every professional can give their best, and where every patient knows they are in the best possible hands, from admission to discharge.
Because we know that behind every medical decision, there is a life story, and we are here to protect it.
Joya Hospitals The place where your doctor trusts, and where you can trust too.
Breaking myths about HPV: Dr. Francisco Borrayo offers informative talk at Hospital Joya
With the aim of promoting a better understanding of sexual health and debunking myths surrounding one of the most common infections, Dr. Francisco Joel Borrayo, an obstetrician-gynecologist at Hospital Joya, gave a talk last weekend entitled "Understanding HPV, human papillomavirus "*. During his talk, the specialist stressed the importance of providing clear, evidence-based information on this virus, which affects both men and women. "It is a fairly common topic, but still surrounded by misinformation. The reality is that we must break the myth that it only affects a specific age group.
The incidence is high at different stages of life," Dr. Borrayo pointed out. In his presentation, the obstetrician-gynecologist addressed some of the most frequent myths that persist among the population. Among them, the belief that if someone has HPV and does not present symptoms, there is nothing to worry about. "Eighty percent of cases do not present visible symptoms, which generates a false sense of security. In addition, another common myth is to think that only women suffer from it, when in fact men can also be carriers and transmitters of the virus," he explained.
The talk, aimed at the general public, is part of the health education activities promoted by Hospital Joya, with the aim of promoting prevention, timely diagnosis and open conversation on sexual health issues. Dr. Borrayo stressed that knowledge is the best tool to combat misinformation and prevent complications associated with HPV, such as precancerous lesions and cervical cancer.
Joya Riviera Hospital