MISSION

Paloma Fairfax & The Nurse's Station exists to ensure that every person has access to clear, compassionate, and accurate reproductive health education. We believe that everyone deserves to understand how and why their body works, from puberty to menopause and everything in between.

Through animated storytelling and bilingual content (English and Spanish), we fill the gaps left by inadequate sex education and overstretched healthcare systems, reaching communities that have been systematically underserved and anyone who has been denied quality reproductive health information.

Our mission is rooted in health equity, destigmatization, and empowerment.

VISION

Paloma Fairfax & The Nurse's Station will be a household name in reproductive health education, reaching the same cultural ubiquity and trust as Sesame Street achieved for early childhood education. We envision a world where reproductive health knowledge is accessible, normalized, and shame-free for all people, regardless of language, income, or geography.

Through animation, digital media, and educational tools, Paloma will become the go-to resource trusted by individuals, families, educators, and healthcare providers worldwide, expanding from social media content to streaming platforms, educational curricula, and global distribution.

ABOUT ALEXANDRA MONZÓN:

Alexandra Monzón, MSN, NP-BC, is the creator of Paloma Fairfax & The Nurse's Station™, a project that weaves together her clinical expertise and lifelong dedication to the arts. A board-certified Nurse Practitioner and educator with more than 16 years of experience in reproductive health, Alexandra created Paloma to make sexual health education more accessible, equitable, and engaging through evidence-based care and creative storytelling. Growing up in a family of artists, Alexandra originally envisioned a future as a performance artist. Her most notable performance work, Baile de Debutante, explored how women shape and reshape their bodies in response to the landscape around them, using the New York City skyline as both witness and canvas. While immersed in New York's creative scene, she worked in art galleries, photography studios, fashion styling, and restaurants, before ultimately finding her way to women's health. That turning point came one day while working on set at a studio in Chelsea, when Alexandra realized her work, whether in performance, fashion, or visual art, had always been rooted in an exploration of women's bodies and experiences. That insight eventually led her to pursue women's health and enroll in nursing school. At nursing school, Alexandra found the learning environment vastly different from the arts education she had previously received. Accustomed to more creative and visual forms of learning, she struggled to retain information through traditional textbooks and lectures. She learned best through listening, watching, and storytelling, yet found very little health education content that felt engaging, accessible, or creatively produced. Realizing she couldn't be the only person who learned this way, she began imagining a different approach to health education, one that was informative, visually compelling, and truly resonated with learners. Drawing on her backgrounds in both the arts and healthcare, Alexandra developed a distinctive approach to health education that blends clinical accuracy with narrative-driven design. Through bilingual animated content in English and Spanish, Paloma delivers medically accurate, shame-free reproductive health education designed to inform, empower, and engage.‍ ‍Know your body. Know your stuff.