market research mexico healthcare – Global Health Intelligence – Healthcare Market Insights for Emerging Markets https://globalhealthintelligence.com The leading source for hospital data and market intelligence across Latin America and Asia. Mon, 01 Dec 2025 19:28:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/cropped-Profile-32x32.png market research mexico healthcare – Global Health Intelligence – Healthcare Market Insights for Emerging Markets https://globalhealthintelligence.com 32 32 The Impact of COVID-19 on Healthcare in Mexico https://globalhealthintelligence.com/ghi-analysis/the-impact-of-covid-19-on-healthcare-in-mexico/ Mon, 29 Nov 2021 21:01:18 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=16289 The pandemic has brought us several lessons and among the more prominent ones have been new ways of working, learning, communicating and doing business. Healthcare has also been affected by the winds of change as telemedicine has gained ground: it has emerged as a new way of providing primary care and following up with patients that receive prolonged treatments for chronic or long-term illnesses.

As such, over the past 18 months telemedicine grew at a level that otherwise would have taken it 10 years to achieve, becoming an impressive breakthrough that has positively impacted the lives of patients and doctors. However, there are still significant challenges directly related to technological access and, above all, connectivity, which are crucial to make this service universal. In Mexico, while it’s true that telemedicine service is driven not just by the government (via the Health Secretariat) but also by the National Center for Technological Excellence in Health (or CENETEC, as per its Spanish-language acronym), overall, telemedicine is still taking its first steps in the country. The keys to telemedicine working effectively are data accessibility and the ability to offer quality service regardless of where the doctor and patient are located.

This involves having a very robust IT system and security features that will protect the data of the patient, the doctor and the institution, i.e., the clinic or hospital, yet still allow for the retrieval of necessary information when appointments and follow-up treatments take place. When it comes to managing medical histories of patients, data access should be provided in a comprehensive way to make it easy for both the doctor and the patient to access the information.

The use of electronic prescriptions, which is still not very well developed in Mexico and offers great potential, is another of the advances that have been spreading across Latin America. The use of digital support for these types of documents, given their legal importance, is exponentially speeding up the connections between pharmacies and doctors, which in turn provides the patient with a fast solution that takes only minutes. This is particularly important in cases in which the participants (doctors and patients) are located in different areas.

Given that Mexico is a large country with a big population and limited professional resources, IT infrastructure offers a beneficial opportunity and, along with telemedicine, can deliver a solution for the lack of available treatment in different areas around the country. While primary care has grown, there has also been an increase of more than 8% in the use of short-stay beds—and huge jump considering that historically, short-stay bed use has only grown by 1-2% per year. This phenomenon is a clear lesson—courtesy of COVID-19—with regard the medical interaction between patients and the institutions.

During the peak infection periods of the pandemic, patients in Mexico decided to reduce doctor visits, partially out of fear and partially due to recommendations by health authorities. This has led them to have a different relationship with healthcare and treat the highly urgent matters in the moment they need to be treated. Today, healthcare and timely diagnoses are driving a reduction in the misuse of beds for elective procedures, allowing more space for necessary procedures. In addition, there has also been an increase in robotic surgery for minimally invasive surgeries, which considerably reduce recovery time for patients and, in turn, shorten their hospital/clinic stays.

The effects of the pandemic have been devastating economically, educationally, politically and emotionally. We have had to reinvent ourselves and work around adversity to come out ahead. Latin American countries have been among the hardest hit in the world by COVID and we still have much work to do in order to fully recover. However, we’ve learned important lessons that have forged the way for implementing technology in places where it would have been unthinkable a few months back. Healthcare and education were the sectors that were most transformed by the effects of the pandemic, and we should treat this transformation as the tip of the iceberg. Moreover, healthcare in particular is a topic that is being discussed in several international forums, such as the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO); last month Carissa F. Etienne, the PAHO’s director, brought to light the urgency of the need to invest in strengthening healthcare systems and in the production of healthcare technologies. Etienne emphasized LAC’s need to become self-sufficient in this area.

We’re now at a tipping point that requires active participation from all the involved healthcare stakeholders to drive development in the region. There is a new way of doing things that is here to stay and it’s necessary for business to organically complement these new ways of doing things by educating professionals, offering universe access to basic healthcare services and, above all, by investing in technology.

That is why we at Global Health Intelligence continually drive the development and implementation of new technologies through our communications channels, which we use to share reports and points of view regarding the technological transformation that is emerging throughout the region. We also strive to work with companies that invest in cutting-edge technology that connect data with the stakeholders that make decisions in Latin America’s healthcare market. Since 2014 our commitment has allowed us to establish different partnerships with key players to generate valuable information to help with decision making.

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The High-Tech Leaders among Latin American Hospitals https://globalhealthintelligence.com/ghi-analysis/the-high-tech-leaders-among-latin-american-hospitals/ Thu, 11 Jun 2020 20:42:07 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=12994 In a webinar that GHI held yesterday, the company identified more than 50 hospitals in Latin America that are the region’s leaders in adopting and acquiring high-tech medical equipment. Among the types of equipment that are considered high-tech for the purposes of GHI’s analysis are:

  • PET scanners
  • Linear accelerators
  • Lithiotripter machines
  • Gamma cameras

According to GHI analysis, only 5% of the hospitals in the region possess these equipment types.

But beyond identifying this 5%, the webinar — entitled The Adoption and Penetration of High-Tech Equipment in Latin America — exhaustively examined the factors that lead hospitals to acquire high-tech equipment.

Most importantly, the webinar features GHI’s TechTier Adoption Model. Based on statistical analysis of hospital ownership and acquisition of more than 40 types of equipment, ranging from basic (such as infusion pumps or newborn cribs) to cutting-edge, expensive equipment and devices, TechTier reveals the stages that hospitals go through as they advance from providing basic, essential care to higher degrees of specialization and more innovative treatments for medical conditions. For medical equipment manufacturers, the TechTier model and a new service developed by GHI can make the difference between increasing your sales success with high-level equipment — or still struggling to find clients and close.

Step Up Your Sales  

Contact GHI today to see how this statistical modeling and data-driven approach can deliver you a fresh new batch of sales targets for your high-tech equipment that may well surprise you. While your sales team may have great experience and contact, our analysis of data that comes straight from the hospitals themselves may help you expand your CRM (and sales pipeline) to a new level.

To explore more of what GHI shared in the webinar, please click here to download the presentation slides and scroll down to view the webinar recording in its entirety.




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Mexico: Essential test for breast cancer https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-essential-test-for-breast-cancer/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-essential-test-for-breast-cancer/#respond Mon, 28 Aug 2017 21:23:54 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=6883/ “Mamma print” is already available to all eligible Mexicans, a genomic analysis test can prevent the chemotherapy treatment in patients with breast cancer. The test focuses on the molecular diagnosis of the tumor so that doctors can provide personalized treatment for patients. With this next- generation diagnosis, doctors can treat patients with therapies by validating genetic receptivity to drugs.

The test, of European origin, classifies patients diagnosed in early non-metastatic stages into two risk groups. Patients in the low-risk group very likely would not to require chemotherapy. In Mexico, 55% of all breast cancer patients in the early stages do not need chemotherapy, but, 95% of them are treated with chemotherapy. This test would help to avoid “unnecessary toxicity”, as well as the contraindications and side-effects of both chemotherapy and drugs. The public health sector can significantly reduce its costs with this test, in addition to being sure to give the treatment that the patient needs. It is normal for patients who react badly to chemotherapy to be hospitalized to treat other types of discomfort from treatment. Of the cancer cases diagnosed in the country, 20% (190,000) correspond to breast, a disease that is covered by the Mexican health system. This is the first time that the public health system has introduced a genomic test into its diagnostic table. This decision was taken by the General Health Council from WHO estimates, according to which 1 in 3 Mexicans will have a diagnosis of cancer throughout their life. The private insurance sector in Mexico has had this test since 2009, which has generated savings of approximately USD23 million.

Elsiglodetorreon

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Mexico: Cancerology to speed diagnosis of infections with new equipment https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-cancerology-to-speed-diagnosis-of-infections-with-new-equipment/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-cancerology-to-speed-diagnosis-of-infections-with-new-equipment/#respond Mon, 28 Aug 2017 21:16:39 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=6877/ The National Institute of Cancerology (INCAN) acquired an automated technology team to ease the detection of infection-causing bacteria thereby making diagnoses more accurate and 50% faster than traditional methods.

The BD Kiestra InoqulA equipment has enabled continuous processing and given the opportunity to bring “Telebacteriology” through high-resolution automated imaging to facilitate remote diagnosis.

The INCAN stated that bacteria evolve daily, and can get to the point of not being controlled. Safety and promptness in bacterial identification and antimicrobial susceptibility studies are essential in the management of patients with infectious diseases, and rapid timely diagnosis and treatment reduce not only morbidity but also the spread of infection. The equipment installed in the clinical laboratory of the microbiology area could contribute to decrease the days of hospitalization of patients and thereby reduce costs associated with the complications suffered by patients.

According to studies by the World Health Organization (WHO), infectious diseases are the second cause of death – just below cardiovascular diseases – because infectious agents cause more than 25% of deaths each year. In a statement, the institute adds that, in 2014 alone, in Mexico there were more than 39 million cases of respiratory, gastrointestinal, urinary tract and periodontal infections, among others. Becton Dickinson’s in Latin America, stated that the type of automation that these diagnostic systems allows doctors to respond more quickly and improve the quality of results.

20minutos

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Mexico: 40 million people suffer from some form of allergy https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-40-million-people-suffer-from-some-form-of-allergy/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-40-million-people-suffer-from-some-form-of-allergy/#respond Mon, 17 Jul 2017 20:52:29 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=6725/ Approximately 40 million people in Mexico suffer from allergy that affects the quality of life of families and causes school and work absenteeism. The National Institute of Respiratory Diseases (INER) stated that 20% of the worlds’ population have allergies, corresponding to 1.5 billion people.

Chronic allergy can last up to three months and in many cases, is recurrent despite the treatments that the patient has undergone. The INER observed that prevalence of allergies in Latin America particularly in Mexico is similar to the numbers reported in highly industrialized countries.

For some types of allergies, the numbers in Mexico is slightly above the global average. According to research in Ciudad Victoria, Tijuana, Mexicali and Monterrey, rhinitis affects 27% of the children between six to seven years and 43% of adolescents aged 13-14years. The category of antihistamines to treat allergies in Mexico reports sales of USD42.2 million and three million units each year.

Unimexicali

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The Cost Spiking of Pharmaceutical Costs in Mexico https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-pharmaceuticals-millions-enter-at-the-expense-of-patients-health/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-pharmaceuticals-millions-enter-at-the-expense-of-patients-health/#comments Tue, 04 Jul 2017 20:28:01 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=6624/ Pharmaceutical companies across the globe earn multi-million dollars by raising the price of their medicines arbitrarily. This reduces the access to medicine and patients which could lead to loss of health and life according to the AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF).

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An example of this is the antiretroviral Kaletra, for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which Abbot sells in Mexico at a price of USD2.96 per pill, which amounts to more than USD2,100 annually.

World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that about 700,000 people die in Latin America every year due to lack of access to medicines. Families in the region spend an average of 30% of their income on health issues. The AHF emphasized on promoting early detection of the disease to curb HIV epidemic.

Currently, only 60% of HIV positive people in Mexico are aware of the available treatments. Government can provide treatment only if the authorities can buy generic medicines at more affordable prices. The organization urged the Mexican government to take advantage of the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

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Additionally, pharmaceuticals prefer to extend their patents on medicines to generate profits at the expense human life. It was suggested by the AHF that patient organizations be included in meetings where governments and pharmaceutical companies discuss reductions in drug prices.

Noreste

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Mexico City advances in the digitization of its network of health services https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-city-advances-in-the-digitization-of-its-network-of-health-services/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-city-advances-in-the-digitization-of-its-network-of-health-services/#comments Mon, 05 Jun 2017 16:27:16 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=6267/ Government of Mexico City advances its strategy in digitizing health services. Carlos Slim Foundation signed an agreement with the government for digitizing a patient data from “El Médico en tu Casa”. This program carries out home health check-ups to detect illness, follow up on pregnant women and review the vaccination of children under five years old. Based on a pilot test carried out, the Electronic Clinical Record (ECE) of patients is registered through a Comprehensive Primary Care Model (MAPI) which is housed in the cloud storage systems of Telmex.

286 electronic tablets will also be distributed for capturing data. The system will allow to generate accurate statistics on the health of the population such as the incidence and prevalence of chronic disorders including diabetes or hypertension or prostrate.

Through the program professionals of “El Médico en Tu Casa” have visited 2.7 million homes.

Telmex guarantees the highest security standards and confidentiality of patients’ personal data. The foundation will enable technology transfer, assembly of information systems, and training and organization of the work teams in the Ministry of Health.

Through the Hospital Administration and Medical Information System (SAMIH), Mexico City aims to become the first Latin American district to implement the ECE in its entire network of public health services, consisting of 31 hospitals and 220 health centers.

 

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Mexico: Obesity – cause for 7 out of 10 deaths in Mexico https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-obesity-cause-for-7-out-of-10-deaths-in-mexico/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-obesity-cause-for-7-out-of-10-deaths-in-mexico/#respond Mon, 22 May 2017 20:05:02 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=6178/ In Mexico, seven out of 10 deaths are associated with overweight and obesity. Amongst the Latin American countries, Mexico ranks first in childhood obesity.

Obesity leads to numerous chronic degenerative disorders whose treatments are expensive and exhausting leading to rise in healthcare expenses.

The Ministry of Health (MoH) plans to increase awareness amongst its people about healthy lifestyles and prevention of obesity. The MoH will be implementing public policies to keep its citizens healthy and fit. The ministry plans to organize free exercise sessions in parks and public squares to improve public awareness about physical activity.

More than 2000 bariatric surgeries have been performed to improve the quality of life. At CDMX, “Health Kiosks” have been set up for basic health checkups. In addition to the 220 health centers and 12 clinics, the Supply Center offers care for those who willing to change their lifestyle.

 

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Mexico’s medical device and equipment market: 8% growth YoY https://globalhealthintelligence.com/ghi-analysis/mexicos-medical-device-and-equipment-market-8-growth-yoy/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/ghi-analysis/mexicos-medical-device-and-equipment-market-8-growth-yoy/#comments Fri, 05 May 2017 11:11:07 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=5911/ Albeit Mexico’s currency depreciation in 2015 and 2016, the market for medical equipment, devices and consumables grew by 8% per year in volume, going from 2.0 billion units in 2014 to 2.4 billion units in 2016f. More importantly still, the value of the market expanded at a 13% CAGR going from $46 billion in 2014 to $60 billion dollars in 2016f.

Leading the trend were products related to artificial respiration; massage equipment; instruments and equipment using UV, visible or IR optical radiations; as well as CT Scanners, X-ray machines, radiography/radiotherapy equipment. In number of units, all these categories demonstrated a CAGR of over 20% from 2014 to 2016f.

Download the complete report for more information.

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Mexico: Health sector creates consortium to boost research projects https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-health-sector-creates-consortium-to-boost-research-projects/ https://globalhealthintelligence.com/news/mexico-health-sector-creates-consortium-to-boost-research-projects/#comments Mon, 24 Apr 2017 22:09:01 +0000 https://globalhealthintelligence.com/?p=5882/ The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), the National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT) and the Ministry of Health (SSA) have agreed to create a Research Consortium in Transnational Medicine and Innovation with the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

The NIH forms a very prominent part of health system and provide services with high quality services for free. Mexico occupies the 29th position in scientific production globally and second in Latin America. UNAM is the most important academic center of the country with 4,598 researchers in the National System of Researchers (SNI), followed by the CONACYT research centers with 1,661.

The NIH and the Hospitals of High Specialty have 1,188 SNI researchers. The formation of the “National Consortium for Research and Innovation in Translational Medicine” will allow a greater involvement of UNAM, CONACYT and the health sector to move from basic research to clinical applications and technological developments.

Inter-institutional cooperation becomes the backbone of this consortium. Transnational medicine was defined as medicine/technology where one can transfer from one place to another. The NIH will be conducting most of the clinical research and teaching supported by UNAM and CONACYT.

The consortium will also be supported by trusts, foundations and companies. Within this framework, awards were given to 10 distinguished researchers from the health system.

 

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