Objectives
The main purpose of this paper was to assess the differences between Seguro Popular (SP) and employer-based health insurance in the use of preventive services, including screening tests for diabetes, cholesterol, hypertension, cervical cancer and prostate cancer among older adults at more than a decade of health care reform in Mexico.
Methods
Logistic regression models were used with data from the Mexican Health and Nutrition Survey 2012.
Results
After adjusting for other factors influencing preventive service utilization, SP enrollees were more likely to use screening tests for diabetes, cholesterol, hypertension and cervical cancer than the uninsured; however, those in employment-based and private insurances had higher odds of using preventive care for most of these services, except Pap smears.
Discussion
Despite all the evidence that suggests that Seguro Popular has increased access to health insurance for the poor, inequalities in healthcare access still exist in Mexico.