Primary Care, Health Services, and the Latino Mortality Paradox.

Publication date: Feb 01, 2025

In the United States, populations of Latino individuals tend to have better mortality outcomes than socioeconomically similar racial and ethnic comparators; this has been termed the “Latino Paradox”. However, advantages from the Latino paradox seem to fade and may be susceptible to other factors (like the COVID-19 pandemic). Quality primary care may improve mortality, but the effect of the intersection of all of these factors in Latino patients is uncertain. There is burgeoning evidence that Latino patients may have more robust utilization of high value primary care services, especially when accessible in a community-oriented fashion. This utilization may become less robust, especially in services that require a more integrated delivery system, as individuals and generations spend more time in the United States. Primary care research may provide additional insights into the underpinnings of the Latino paradox and may complement the public health foundation that has undergirded work on the paradox in the last few decades. Investments in primary care infrastructure and research may be beneficial to the health of Latinos in the United States, and incorporating the needs of this diverse population into primary care system design at scale may pay large dividends for our societal health.

Concepts Keywords
Decades Community health centers
Fashion COVID-19
Latinos Health disparities
Mortality Health Services
Socioeconomically Health Services Accessibility
Hispani/Latino
Hispanic or Latino
Humans
Latino Mortality Paradox
Mortality
Primary Care
Primary Health Care
United States
White

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO quality
disease MESH Health disparities
disease MESH Health Services Accessibility

Original Article

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