CIMMYT being ready saves two Mexican girls: local community in northern Mexico benefits from work of the Security and Hygiene Committee
Youâve heard of collateral damage, but this story is about collateral benefits, according to IvĂĄn Ortiz-Monasterio, CIMMYT wheat agronomist posted to Ciudad ObregĂłn, Sonora, northern Mexico. âAt 1 a.m. on February 19th, Rodrigo RascĂłn, superintendent of CIMMYT station operations, left his home to pick up a dose of Toxogonin from the station,â says Ortiz-Monasterio. âHe delivered this to the General Hospital of Ciudad ObregĂłn, and it helped save two lives.â
According to reports, three young girls in ChĂnipasâa small town in the canyons of the Western Sierra Madre of Chihuahua State and best accessed by air in emergenciesâhad accidentally consumed toxic agrochemicals. One died, and the other two were rushed to the toxicology unit of the Ciudad ObregĂłn hospital. The nearest source they knew of for the antidote was eight hours away, so hospital officials contacted a local provider, who informed them that, given its work and the safety provisions promoted by its Security and Hygiene Committee, CIMMYT-ObregĂłn was likely to have the needed medicine. The chain of urgent communications next led to Jorge Artee, representative of the Agricultural Research and Experimentation Board of the State of Sonora (âPatronato,â for short), a Mexican farmer association that has benefited from CIMMYT research and provided funding and other long-term support to the Center. Artee quickly got in touch with Ortiz-Monasterio, who called RascĂłn.
Because they take place behind the scenes, the efforts of units like CIMMYTâs Security and Hygiene Committee usually go unheralded, but an emergency like that described here helps remind us of the value of their work. Congrats to Committee members: Isidro JimĂ©nez Olvera, Jorge Montoya Moroyoqui, Carlos GonzĂĄlez LeĂłn, Manuel de JesĂșs Ruiz Cano, Rodrigo RascĂłn Gamez.