Dr. Liliana Rojas-Guyler brought up some very relevant
points in her lecture which seemed to fit in with the idea that the Hispanic
community faces opposition on numerous levels. I think that one of the points
she brought up that I most agree with is the fact that many immigrants distrust
the “system” and that greatly hurts their ability to feel comfortable pursuing
help when they need it. Dr. Rojas-Guyler stated that it’s one thing to find a
doctor and get to her office, but it’s a second and entirely different thing to
actually trust the doctor. If someone can’t trust the doctor they are seeing,
there is a much smaller chance that they will receive the medical care they
need. I know that my grandmother is awful to take to a doctor. She feels that
it’s socially inappropriate to complain to a man (yet ironically will only see
a male doctor because “men are doctors”), but she also is extremely hesitant to
trust someone and often lies about what’s wrong with her. She grew up in a
middle-class white family and if she has this type of issues, I can only
imagine how hard it would be to trust a doctor if you had actually be subjected
to discrimination.
Good point. You have to have faith and trust in your healthcare practitioner to accept and follow their advice. So even if all of the other obstacles are met-- transportation, lack of insurance, language barriers-- a person can still lack medical care if they are unable or unwilling to trust their healthcare provider.
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