So it's no surprise that when a dangerous new swine flu virus began to sweep across Mexico, many waited too long to seek medical help
- more than a week on average, according to federal Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova.
These initial delays complicated treatment, possibly explaining why 45 of the world's 47 swine flu deaths occurred in Mexico.
It also made it more difficult for Mexico to recognize the outbreak for what it was. By the time Cordova announced a swine flu epidemic on April 23, the virus had already spread across the country and beyond.
Mexico's big cities have fancy private hospitals stocked with modern equipment and staffed with U.S. board-certified specialists. Americans increasingly come to Mexico for good care at low prices. The best of the public system is world-class too, with top doctors at elite centers for specialized diseases.
But Mexico's everyday public hospital system is in crisis.
Some patients suspected of having swine flu told The Associated Press that public hospitals turned them away or forced them to wait for hours for treatment even after the government declared a national emergency.
Those who sought help before the alert - often arriving with headaches, high fevers and difficulty breathing
- encountered baffled doctors who had not been warned to watch for a new virus.
Mexicans navigate a patchwork of public and private hospital systems. There are hospitals for government employees and hospitals for workers enrolled in government health plans through private employers. Most patients have to go to a hospital tied to a specific agency.
"If someone is sick, he can't simply say, 'I'm going to the doctor' or
'I'm going to the hospital,' because it depends on whether he has Social Security or if he has to go to another institution," said Dr. Malaquias Lopez Cervantes, a leading epidemiologist at Mexico's National Autonomous University.
"And if he comes (to the wrong hospital), somebody is going to tell him that he doesn't have the right to be treated."
While access to health care is a right enshrined in the Mexican constitution, millions of Mexicans have no health insurance at all.
Mexico spends only 6.6 percent of its gross domestic product on health care
- less than half the U.S. figure. No country in the 30-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development puts a smaller share of public money into its health care system.
That means the hospitals serving most of Mexico's 44 million poor are often crowded, ill-equipped and staffed with harried, underpaid staff working for a dizzying array of bureaucracies.