NPR

How Bogotá cares for its family caregivers: From dance classes to job training

More than a million women in Bogotá, Colombia, do unpaid family caregiver work full-time. The country has launched a groundbreaking program called "Care Blocks" to ease their burden.
Salamanca, joined by her grandkids at the end of science class, wait their turn to look through a microscope.

On a recent chilly morning, about a dozen women and one man have gathered in a large room in Bogotá. The big windows on one side of the room look out at a neighborhood nestled in the slopes of the Andes mountains.

The people in the room are here for a weekly dance lesson. Over the next hour, they follow the instructor's directions, moving in two lines with slow rhythmic steps, dancing to the beats of a traditional Colombian folk music called Cumbia.

The class is one of the free services offered to anyone in the neighborhood who is an unpaid caregiver for their family, part of a groundbreaking city-led program rolled out in 2020 called Manzanas del Cuidado, or Care Blocks. Each block provides a set of services, including wellness and professional training, within a short walk of residents in neighboring areas. The program is trying to ease the often invisible burdens on Bogotá's family caregivers – the vast majority of whom are women – and help them pursue their own interests, including education and finding paid jobs.

The caregivers smile and chat as they dance, helping one another when someone falters in the middle of a sequence. Some

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