This psychosocial characterization study proposes the integration of the variable of knowledge of PD patients' rights with aspects related to physical health, physical activity, emotional state, and health care in a sample of 61 people with PD. The psychosocial approach addresses complementary variables to the clinical diagnosis of PD, such as socioeconomic, educational, cultural, and family variables. The rights-based approach is consistent about the effects on these different areas of life and seeks to ensure that health care is comprehensive and contributes to people's well-being, beyond the treatment of symptoms. The instrument used to obtain the data corresponds to a Likert scale designed, piloted, evaluated, and applied to the data analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively. The results show low levels of knowledge of PD patients' rights. The analysis reports a significant correlation between physical health and emotional states (rho=0.421, p<.001 CI95% [0.60, -0.18]), and a significant correlation between physical activity and knowledge of rights (rho=0.347, p<.001, CI95% [0.55, - 0.10]). People with prepaid medicine have higher scores in physical health (M= 85.6, SD= 13.5) and emotional states (M= 16.1, SD= 5.1).