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Despite the presumed health benefits, Latinas are less likely than women from other ethnic groups to receive adequate prenatal care during their pregnancy. However, it is unclear whether this trend is the result of political economic conditions that limit access of many Latinos in the United States to adequate health services in general, or of sociocultural conditions that restrict the use of such services even when they are made available. Furthermore, it is unclear whether these barriers pose a risk for adverse birth outcomes in this population. To address these issues, we conducted a two-phase study of the political economic and sociocultural barriers to use of prenatal care services among Mexican and Mexican American women living in San Diego, California, and their association with adverse birth outcomes in this population. A quantitative assessment of information abstracted from the medical records of 173 Latinas who had given birth at a university medical center found that absence of Medi-Cal benefits or other forms of health insurance was the only significant predictor of inadequate prenatal care during pregnancy. However, neither lack of insurance nor adequate prenatal care was associated with any adverse birth outcomes. A qualitative analysis of information obtained from interviews of 30 Latinas receiving prenatal care services at a medical clinic for the homeless and medically underserved residents of San Diego identified three major themes underlying the lack of adequate prenatal care: lack of trust in formal versus informal institutions, wanted versus unwanted pregnancies, and the importance of the social network....
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