MMexico has received a shipment of medical ventilators from the US to help treat COVID-19 patients, says Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard.
The 211 machines were purchased from a US firm following an informal agreement between the neighbouring nations' leaders in mid-April.
Last week, several hospitals in Mexico City said they were turning patients away because of a lack of equipment.
“We want to very fully thank the government of the United States, especially President Trump,” said Ebrard. “As the saying goes, when there are hard times is when you know who your friends are.”
Gracias a Chris Landau, embajador de EU en México, Bob Hamilton de ventiladores Hamilton, Jorge Torres de FedEx por haber hecho posible el arribo a México de 211 ventiladores justo hoy como lo previeron los presidentes Andrés Manuel López Obrador y Donald Trump.
— Marcelo Ebrard C. (@m_ebrard) May 5, 2020
According to Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Mr Trump agreed to sell Mexico 1,000 ventilators, with the option to buy more, when they spoke on the phone in April.
Tuesday's shipment came from Hamilton Medical and each ventilator was purchased for between $16,000 and $24,000 (£13,000 to £19,000), according to Mr Ebrard.
President López Obrador said in his daily news conference that he planned to visit the US in July to thank President Trump "for the help we received in confronting the pandemic".
At the time of publication, Mexico has reported 26,025 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 2,507 deaths.
However, according to the BBC, it has conducted a very low number of tests and the government said on Sunday that statistical modelling would put the real number of cases at more than 104,000
The US has the world's highest number of confirmed infections with more than 1.2 million cases and more than 70,000 deaths.