Varieties of Health Services Utilization by Underserved Mexican American Women
- 1 February 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Project MUSE in Journal Of Health Care For The Poor and Underserved
- Vol. 14 (1) , 52-69
- https://doi.org/10.1353/hpu.2010.0827
Abstract
Varieties of health services utilization by medically underserved patients were examined in 250 Mexican American women attending a primary care clinic in San Diego, California. Less than half (48.4 percent) of these medically underserved women had obtained clinical preventive services conforming to recommended guidelines, 34.4 percent reported having obtained an annual physical examination in the past year, and 66.0 percent reported visiting a doctor only when they were sick. Lack of any form of health insurance, including Medi-Cal, was associated with underutilization of primary care services to a greater degree than the other variables examined. However, other factors such as full-time employment, low education, dissatisfaction with primary care delivery, and cultural preference for traditional ethnomedical alternative forms of health care, constitute important barriers to utilization of primary care services. Efforts to provide health care to the medically underserved must take these barriers into consideration if they are to be successful.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Barriers To Care Among Racial/Ethnic Groups Under Managed CareHealth Affairs, 2000
- Health Services Utilization Among Latinos and White Non-Latinos: Results From a National SurveyJournal Of Health Care For The Poor and Underserved, 2000
- Limited English Proficiency and Latinos’ Use of Physician ServicesMedical Care Research and Review, 2000
- Cross-Cultural Primary Care: A Patient-Based ApproachAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1999
- Gender, psychosocial factors and the use of medical services: a longitudinal analysisSocial Science & Medicine, 1999
- Going bare: trends in health insurance coverage, 1989 through 1996.American Journal of Public Health, 1999
- The Role of Black and Hispanic Physicians in Providing Health Care for Underserved PopulationsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Self-reported Use of Cancer Screening Tests Among Latinos and Anglos in a Prepaid Health PlanArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1994
- Culture and clinical care. Folk illness beliefs and behaviors and their implications for health care deliveryPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1994
- Undocumented Latin American Immigrants and U.S. Health Services: An Approach to a Political Economy of UtilizationMedical Anthropology Quarterly, 1992