Villa-Caballero Leonel, Caballero-Solano Víctor Manuel, Andrade-Barreto Olga Alicia
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0622, USA.
Gac Med Mex. 2008 Sep-Oct;144(5):389-94.
The international process of trading goods and services with significant reduction in barriers known as globalization is clearly observed at the San Diego-Tijuana region. This essay addresses issues arising at this unique geographical area associated with the globalization process and its public health consequences. Social, cultural and political aspects have very important implications on the health status of the U.S-Mexican population and in the health care systems on both sides of the border. One of the most powerful world economies borders a developing country resulting in a dramatic comparison that has negative outcomes such as health disparities, high prevalence of chronic diseases and new epidemiological risks. Poverty and migration are a few of the contributing factors triggering this asymmetrical relationship. Challenges in border health require a comprehensive binational participation and the solutions are yet to be determined.