"Without money you're nothing": poverty and health in Mexico from women's perspective.

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Abstract

The objective of this qualitative study was to get to know poor Mexican women's experience of poverty in relation to health care. Forty-nine interviews were carried out with poor adult women in Mexico (between 35 and 65 years old). Three central elements were detected in relation to the women's experience of poverty and health care: their socio-economic dependence on their family; the notion of social belonging in their experience with health care rights, reflected in the idea and acceptance that, due to their poverty, they can only be attended at philanthropic institutions; and the existence of survival mechanisms when facing an illness. In recovering the experience of poor women in relation to their health care, we identified that there is a clear idea that, if women had had economic resources, their health problem would have been solved differently. They are also convinced that, due to being poor, they have to content themselves with bad-quality medical care. This conformity finally makes them resign to the fact of either loosing a part of their own body, or even just waiting for death.

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APA

Tezoquipa, I. H., Monreal, L. A., & Treviño-Siller, S. (2005). “Without money you’re nothing”: poverty and health in Mexico from women’s perspective. Revista Latino-Americana de Enfermagem, 13(5), 626–633. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-11692005000500004

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