Mexico National Health Survey 1987
General Info
Original or alternative title
Encuesta Nacional de Salud (ENSA I) 1987
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
January, 1987 - December, 1987
Data type
Survey:
Cross-sectional - Household - Individual - Nationally representative - Subnationally representative
Summary
The Mexico National Health Survey (ENSA) 1987 was conducted to provide health institutions at the federal and state level with information on morbidity, mortality, risk factors, and health service utilization.
A sample of 54,000 households was designed to provide national as well as subnational estimates.
The topics in the questionnaires included: sociodemographic characteristics, health status, injuries, disability, maternal health, and the use and demand for both formal and informal health services.
Keywords
Abortion, Agriculture, Alcohol use, Amputation, Analgesics, Antibiotics, Assets, BCG vaccines, Birth control pills, Birth place, Breastfeeding, Burns, Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, Chronic respiratory diseases, Community health clinics, Condoms, Contraceptives, Dental care, Diaphragms, Diarrhea, Diet, Disability, Education, Education access, Employment, Epilepsy, Family composition, Family planning, Family size, Fishing, Health care access, Health care use, Health insurance, Health status, Hearing loss, Hospitals, Housing conditions, Housing materials, Hypertension, Immunization, Injectable contraceptives, Intentional injuries, Interpersonal violence, Live births, MMR vaccines, Marital status, Mass media, Measles vaccines, Medicines, Idiopathic intellectual disability, Mining, Musculoskeletal diseases, Neonatal conditions, Neonatal jaundice, Occupational injuries, Occupations, Personal health expenditures, Place of delivery, Polio vaccines, Pregnancy, Prescriptions, Preterm birth complications, Refrigeration, Road traffic injuries, Sanitation, School enrollment, Sexual sterilization, Skilled birth attendants, Spermicides, Summary birth history, Surgical procedures, Teachers, Telephones, Tobacco smoking, Traditional birth control, Traditional medicine, Transportation, Tuberculosis, Unintentional injuries, Vision loss, Water supply, Abortive outcome
Citation
Suggested citation
National Institute of Public Health (Mexico), Secretariat of Health (Mexico). Mexico National Health Survey 1987.