Spatial analysis of social vulnerability in health in the Mexican South Pacific region
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Author:
Alarcón, Iliana Villerias
Castañeda, Giovanna Santana
Juárez, Marcela Virginia Santana
Rodríguez, Rodrigo Huitrón
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 339, Studia Geographica 16 (2021), s. [7]-18
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: en
Subject:
healthMexican South Pacific region
socio-spatial conditions
vulnerability
Date: 2021
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Show full item recordAbstract
This article reflects on the current context of social and health vulnerability, which has become
a central issue in government agendas at all levels. They represent social, economic,
environmental and health processes that generate a mixed exposure of the territory and the
people who inhabit it, making some more vulnerable than others; on the other hand, these
conditions are also reflected in the response capacity of each individual, household and
society.
The objective of this research is to determine the social vulnerability in health in the Mexican
South Pacific region, using the official data from the Population and Housing Census of 2020,
disaggregated at the municipal level. The variables or socio-spatial conditioning factors of
health have been selected, which have been standardized using an omega index to obtain a
synthesis indicator of all the variables used, applying a multivariate analysis technique called
Spatial Classification Scores (SCS). It allows carrying out an integration of the variables used
in a systematic way, which allows a better evaluation and understanding to identify areas
with greater or lesser vulnerability.
The Mexican South Pacific region is a territory of great diversity and complexity, both in the
social as well as in the economic and geographical context, which is why at the national level
is the region with the greatest social backwardness and with the worst health rates. The results
show that the highest vulnerability values are located in Cochoapa el Grande, Metlatónoc
(Guerrero) and San Simón Zahuatlán (Oaxaca), characterized by high deficiencies in health
services, education, decent housing and employment.