Abstract
Health services from Mexico constitute an important source of care for U.S. residents living along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Data from The Cross-Border Utilization of Health Care Survey (n = 966) were used to estimate logit models that related acculturation,
as measured by generational status, to the use of medication, physician, dental, and inpatient services from Mexico by U.S.
residents in the Texas border region. Relative to first-generation Mexican immigrants, later-generation Mexican–Americans
were progressively less likely to go to Mexico for health services. This finding holds with or without adjusting for the effects
of selected demographic and socioeconomic variables. Addressing unmet needs in medical care in the southwestern U.S. border
area should go beyond a simple expansion of health insurance coverage—it is also important to deliver health services that
are sensitive to generational differences within the population in terms of linguistic and cultural barriers to health care
access.
Data from The Cross-Border Utilization of Health Care Survey (n = 966) were used to estimate logit models that related acculturation,
as measured by generational status, to the use of medication, physician, dental, and inpatient services from Mexico by U.S.
residents in the Texas border region. Relative to first-generation Mexican immigrants, later-generation Mexican–Americans
were progressively less likely to go to Mexico for health services. This finding holds with or without adjusting for the effects
of selected demographic and socioeconomic variables. Addressing unmet needs in medical care in the southwestern U.S. border
area should go beyond a simple expansion of health insurance coverage—it is also important to deliver health services that
are sensitive to generational differences within the population in terms of linguistic and cultural barriers to health care
access.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Original Paper
- Pages 1-7
- DOI 10.1007/s10903-011-9518-x
- Authors
- Dejun Su, Department of Sociology and South Texas Border Health Disparities Center, University of Texas–Pan American, 1201 W. University Drive, Edinburg, TX 78539, USA
- Daphne Wang, Department of Economics & Finance, College of Business Administration and South Texas Border Health Disparities Center, University of Texas–Pan American, 1201 W. University Drive, Edinburg, TX 78539, USA
- Journal Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
- Online ISSN 1557-1920
- Print ISSN 1557-1912