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Cultural Health Capital on the margins: Cultural resources for navigating healthcare in communities with limited access

Erin Fanning Madden

Social Science & Medicine, 2015, vol. 133, issue C, 145-152

Abstract: Communities struggling with access to healthcare in the U.S. are often considered to be disadvantaged and lacking in resources. Yet, these communities develop and nurture valuable strategies for healthcare access that are underrecognized by health scholars. Combining medical sociology and critical race theory perspectives on cultural capital, this paper examines the health-relevant cultural resources, or Cultural Health Capital, in South Texas Mexican American border communities. Ethnographic data collected during 2011–2013 in Cameron and Hidalgo counties on the U.S.–Mexico border provide empirical evidence for expanding existing notions of health-relevant cultural capital. These Mexican American communities use a range of cultural resources to manage healthcare exclusion and negotiate care in alternative healthcare spaces like community clinics, flea markets and Mexican pharmacies. Navigational, social, familial, and linguistic skills and knowledge are used to access doctors and prescription drugs in these spaces despite social barriers to mainstream healthcare (e.g. cost, English language skills, etc.). Cultural capital used in marginalized communities to navigate limited healthcare options may not always fully counteract healthcare exclusion. Nevertheless, recognizing the cultural resources used in Mexican American communities to facilitate healthcare challenges deficit views and yields important findings for policymakers, healthcare providers, and advocates seeking to capitalize on community resources to improve healthcare access.

Keywords: United States; U.S.–Mexico border; Cultural capital; Latinos; Healthcare access; Race and ethnicity (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.04.006

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