433 results
Search Results
2. How can entrepreneurs experience inform responsible health innovation policies? A longitudinal case study in Canada and Brazil.
- Author
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Lehoux P, Silva HP, Miller F, Denis JL, and Pozelli RS
- Subjects
- Humans, Brazil, Canada, Longitudinal Studies, Health Policy, Government Programs
- Abstract
Aim: To foster equity and make health systems economically and environmentally more sustainable, Responsible Innovation in Health (RIH) calls for policy changes advocated by mission-oriented innovation policies. These policies focus, however, on instruments to foster the supply of innovations and neglect health policies that affect their uptake. Our study's aim is to inform policies that can support RIH by gaining insights into RIH-oriented entrepreneurs' experience with the policies that influence both the supply of, and the demand for their innovations., Methods: We recruited 16 for-profit and not-for-profit organisations engaged in the production of RIH in Brazil and Canada in a longitudinal multiple case study. Our dataset includes three rounds of interviews (n = 48), self-reported data, and fieldnotes. We performed qualitative thematic analyses to identify across-cases patterns., Findings: RIH-oriented entrepreneurs interact with supply side policies that support technology-led solutions because of their economic potential but that are misaligned with societal challenge-led solutions. They navigate demand side policies where market approval and physician incentives largely condition the uptake of technology-led solutions and where emerging policies bring some support to societal challenge-led solutions. Academic intermediaries that bridge supply and demand side policies may facilitate RIH, but our findings point to an overall lack of policy directionality that limits RIH., Conclusion: As mission-oriented innovation policies aim to steer innovation towards the tackling of societal challenges, they call for a major shift in the public sector's role. A comprehensive mission-oriented policy approach to RIH requires policy instruments that can align, orchestrate, and reconcile health priorities with a renewed understanding of innovation-led economic development., (© 2023 The Authors. The International Journal of Health Planning and Management published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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3. Popular education in the SUS: current challenges from the perspective of the Observatory of Popular Health Education and the Brazilian Reality.
- Author
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Cruz PJSC, Brito PNA, Santana ELP, Silva JCD, Barbosa DS, and Moraes OA
- Subjects
- Brazil, Humans, National Health Programs organization & administration, Public Policy, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Social Participation, Community Participation methods, Health Education methods, Health Promotion methods, Health Policy, Public Health education
- Abstract
This paper aims to bring reflections and notes for strengthening Brazilian structuring public policies, focusing on Popular Health Education in the Unified Health System (SUS) from the perspectives built in the Observatory of Popular Health Education and the Brazilian Reality. The Observatory is a valuable space for sharing health professionals' and popular educators' interpretations and experiences about local and Brazilian realities from the perspective of Popular Health Education. During its two years of activity, the Observatory has gathered summary interpretations of Popular Health Education for the crises that traverse the country's recent history in a dialogical and participatory way. In a panoramic view, the shared statements point to challenges for valuing the human approach to health promotion, including respecting local and community knowledge and social practices. Moreover, we underscore the importance of social participation in constructing participatory social processes in public health toward citizen autonomy and expanded democratic dynamics in the Brazilian State and its social equipment.
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- 2024
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4. Decentralization of the health system - experiences from Pakistan, Portugal and Brazil.
- Author
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Mahmood S, Sequeira R, Siddiqui MMU, Herkenhoff MBA, Ferreira PP, Fernandes AC, and Sousa P
- Subjects
- Humans, Brazil, Developing Countries, Pakistan, Portugal, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Health Care Reform organization & administration, Health Policy, Politics
- Abstract
Background: Decentralization of a health system is a complex and multidimensional phenomenon that demands thorough investigation of its process logistics, predisposing factors and implementation mechanisms, within the broader socio-political environment of each nation. Despite its wide adoption across both high-income countries (HICs) and low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs), empirical evidence of whether decentralization actually translates into improved health system performance remains inconclusive and controversial. This paper aims to provide a comprehensive description of the decentralization processes in three countries at different stages of their decentralization strategies - Pakistan, Brazil and Portugal., Main Body: This study employed a systematic analysis of peer-reviewed academic journals, official government reports, policy documents and publications from international organizations related to health system decentralization. A comprehensive search was conducted using reputable databases such as PubMed, Google Scholar, the WHO repository and other relevant databases, covering the period up to the knowledge cutoff date in June 2023. Information was systematically extracted and organized into the determinants, process mechanics and challenges encountered during the planning, implementation and post-decentralization phases. Although decentralization reforms have achieved some success, challenges persist in their implementation. Comparing all three countries, it was evident that all three have prioritized health in their decentralization reforms and aimed to enhance local decision-making power. Brazil has made significant progress in implementing decentralization reforms, while Portugal and Pakistan are still in the process. Pakistan has faced significant implementation challenges, including capacity-building, resource allocation, resistance to change and inequity in access to care. Brazil and Portugal have also faced challenges, but to a lesser extent. The extent, progress and challenges in the decentralization processes vary among the three countries, each requiring ongoing evaluation and improvement to achieve the desired outcomes., Conclusion: Notable differences exist in the extent of decentralization, the challenges faced during implementation and inequality in access to care between the three countries. It is important for Portugal, Brazil and Pakistan to address these through reinforcing implementation strategies, tackling inequalities in access to care and enhancing monitoring and evaluation mechanism. Additionally, fostering knowledge sharing among these different countries will be instrumental in facilitating mutual learning., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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5. Transforming dementia research into policy change: A case study of the multi-country STRiDE project.
- Author
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Weidner, Wendy, Amour, Rochelle, Breuer, Erica, Toit, Petra Du, Farres, Rosa, Franzon, Ana C., Astudillo-García, Claudia I., Govia, Ishtar, Jacobs, Roxanne, López-Ortega, Mariana, Mateus, Elaine, Musyimi, Christine, Mutunga, Elizabeth, Muyela, Levi, Palmer, Tiffany, Pattabiraman, Meera, Ramasamy, Narendhar, Robinson, Janelle N., Knapp, Martin, and Comas-Herrera, Adelina
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DIFFUSION of innovations ,HUMAN services programs ,HEALTH policy ,TRANSLATIONAL research ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,QUALITY of life ,DEMENTIA ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,DEMENTIA patients - Abstract
STRiDE was an ambitious four-year project in seven countries aiming to build capacity around generating and using research to support the development of policies to improve quality of life of people with dementia and their carers. The project's innovative approach combined rigorous academic research and hands-on civil society advocacy. This paper explores the project's unique strategy for policy change and compiles case-studies from several of the STRiDE countries. Finally, we share lessons learned and next steps to keep momentum for policy change going in each of these countries – and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Does Legal Change Induce Behavioral Change in Domestic Violence Against Women?
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Schneider, Rodrigo and Piazza, Kelly Senters
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VIOLENCE prevention ,HEALTH policy ,ASSAULT & battery ,DOMESTIC violence ,WOMEN ,CRIMINALS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SELF-efficacy ,GENDER ,HOSPITAL care ,PUNISHMENT ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,VICTIMS ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,BEHAVIOR modification ,CRIMINAL justice system ,POISSON distribution ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
In this paper, we study the effectiveness of the Brazilian "Maria da Penha" Law—a law that imposed criminal sanctions on and promoted rehabilitation programs for known perpetrators of acts of domestic violence exclusively against women, issued restraining orders against perpetrators, required perpetrators to surrender firearms, and established police units uniquely trained to address violence against women. Using difference-in-difference analyses estimated with data on Brazilian monthly assault-related hospitalizations and with gender as treatment variable, we find that the law contributed to a 22% reduction in assault-related hospitalizations among women as compared with men. Our data is collected from the Brazilian public healthcare system named Sistema Único de Saúde, which provides public information on detailed records of hospitalizations in Brazil. We provide robustness checks of our analyses and examine heterogeneous effects of the law. With respect to the latter, we deduce that the effectiveness of the law in reducing assault-related hospitalizations among women was especially pronounced in municipalities where women are most vulnerable to domestic violence. We conclude with a discussion of our results, with an eye to policy implications and areas for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. The iatrogenesis of obstetric racism in Brazil: beyond the body, beyond the clinic.
- Author
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Williamson, K. Eliza
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MATERNAL health services ,RACISM ,HEALTH policy ,CHILDBIRTH ,FEMINISM - Abstract
In Brazil, Black women are disproportionately denied access to timely care and are made vulnerable to death by avoidable obstetric causes. However, they have not been at the center of recent initiatives to improve maternal health. This paper contends that the effectiveness of Brazilian maternal and infant health policy is limited by failures to robustly address racial health inequities. Multi-sited ethnographic research on the implementation of the Rede Cegonha program in Bahia, Brazil between 2012 and 2017 reveals how anti-Blackness structures iatrogenic harms for Black women as well as their kin in maternal healthcare. Building on the work of Black Brazilian feminists, the paper shows how Afro-Brazilian women experience anti-Black racism in obstetric care, which the paper argues can be better understood through Dána-Ain Davis' concept of obstetric racism. The paper suggests that such forms of violence reveal the necropolitical facets of reproductive governance and that the framing of obstetric violence broadens the scales and temporalities of iatrogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Secondary dental care quality in Brazil: What we are talking about?
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Goes, Paulo Sávio Angeiras de, Biazevic, Maria Gabriela, Celeste, Roger Keller, and Moyses, Samuel
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MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL change ,ORAL health ,DENTAL care ,RACE ,SATISFACTION ,ACQUISITION of data ,DENTAL specialties ,QUALITY assurance ,SECONDARY care (Medicine) - Published
- 2022
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9. Elder Abuse Prevention in Brazil, Norway and Slovakia: a Narrative Review.
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Tokovska, Miroslava, Šolcová, Jana, Ferreira, Vanessa Nolasco, Nour, Magde Mohamed, Yilmaz, Muharrem, Malmedal, Wenche Karin, and Botngård, Anja
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ABUSE of older people ,CINAHL database ,CONSCIOUSNESS raising ,HEALTH policy ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,SCIENCE databases ,INTERNET searching ,MEDLINE - Abstract
With the global population ageing, concerns about the incidence, prevalence and prevention of elder abuse have become increasingly pertinent. This study presents a narrative review of empirical research, investigating the elder abuse prevention implemented in public health policies in three selected countries. The narrative review aims to enrich academic critical discussion about the theme and provide insights for policymakers and professional practitioners working towards elder abuse prevention across different regions. Searches in the electronic database CINAHL, Medline, PsycINFO and Web of Science databases were performed to identify and synthesise studies reporting on research aimed at investigating elder abuse prevention. The studies that handle on all prevention levels, had to be published in a peer-reviewed journal, report on empirical research, and are available in full text in Portuguese, Slovak, English or Norwegian and published within a ten-year period (2012 to 2022) were included. A total of 981 studies were retrieved, of which 13 papers met the inclusion criteria for this narrative review. The evidence indicated that proactive approach within primordial and primary prevention, interdisciplinary cooperation within primary and secondary prevention, and education for healthcare professionals within all forms of prevention were implemented to various extent as elder abuse prevention in Brazil, Norway and Slovakia. There is a need to further enhance public awareness of elder abuse through campaigns and advocacy programs; additionally, the routine screening and assessments by healthcare providers for early detection and intervention in suspected abuse cases require improvement; and also, legal and health policy measures must be updated regularly. Elder abuse prevention should be a collective undertaking involving community leaders, healthcare providers, and governmental and non-governmental organisations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. A CONTINUOUS SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL MATHEMATICAL MODEL FOR ASSESSING THE DISTRIBUTION OF DENGUE IN BRAZIL WITH CONTROL.
- Author
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DOS SANTOS, FERNANDO LUIZ PIO, BENDAHMANE, MOSTAFA, ERRAJI, ELMAHDI, and KARAMI, FAHD
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ARBOVIRUS diseases ,DENGUE ,MATHEMATICAL models ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC investments ,INFECTION control ,INSECTICIDE resistance ,MOSQUITO control - Abstract
In this paper, we developed an optimal control of a reaction–diffusion mathematical model, describing the spatial spread of dengue infection. Compartments for human and vector populations are considered in the model, including a compartment for the aquatic phase of mosquitoes. This enabled us to discuss the vertical transmission effects on the spread of the disease in a two-dimensional domain, using demographic data for different scenarios. The model was analyzed, establishing the existence and convergence of the weak solution for the model. The convergence of the numerical scheme to the weak solution was proved. For numerical approximation, we adopted the finite element scheme to solve direct and adjoint state systems. We also used the nonlinear gradient descent method to solve the optimal control problem, where the optimal management of government investment was proposed and leads to more effective dengue fever infection control. These results may help us understand the complex dynamics driven by dengue and assess the public health policies in the control of the disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. National guidelines of care for amputees' health: current challenges and prospects.
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Tonon da Luz, Soraia Cristina, Sarmento, Tuane, Bender dos Santos, Kadine Priscila, Adão de Medeiros, Paulo, Siqueira Ruy, Tayla, Lorenzetti Branco, Ruy Luiz, and da Silva Honório, Gesilani Júlia
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CIVIL rights ,MEDICAL protocols ,DISABILITY laws ,HEALTH services accessibility ,AMPUTATION ,PRIMARY health care ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,AMPUTEES ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,PUBLIC health ,RIGHT to health ,HEALTH care teams ,LAW ,LEGISLATION ,REHABILITATION - Abstract
Copyright of Brazilian Journal of Occupational Therapy / Cadernos Brasileiros de Terapia Ocupacional is the property of Cadernos de Terapia Ocupacional da UFSCar and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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12. Association of urban inequality and income segregation with COVID-19 mortality in Brazil.
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Sousa Filho, J. Firmino de, Silva, Uriel M., Lima, Larissa L., Paiva, Aureliano S. S., Santos, Gervásio F., Andrade, Roberto F. S., Gouveia, Nelson, Silveira, Ismael H., de Lima Friche, Amélia A., Barreto, Maurício L., and Caiaffa, Waleska Teixeira
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INCOME inequality ,DEATH rate ,HEALTH policy ,URBAN agriculture ,MORTALITY ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Socioeconomic factors have exacerbated the impact of COVID–19 worldwide. Brazil, already marked by significant economic inequalities, is one of the most affected countries, with one of the highest mortality rates. Understanding how inequality and income segregation contribute to excess mortality by COVID–19 in Brazilian cities is essential for designing public health policies to mitigate the impact of the disease. This paper aims to fill in this gap by analyzing the effect of income inequality and income segregation on COVID–19 mortality in large urban centers in Brazil. We compiled weekly COVID–19 mortality rates from March 2020 to February 2021 in a longitudinal ecological design, aggregating data at the city level for 152 Brazilian cities. Mortality rates from COVID-19 were compared across weeks, cities and states using mixed linear models. We estimated the associations between COVID-19 mortality rates with income inequality and income segregation using mixed negative binomial models including city and week-level random intercepts. We measured income inequality using the Gini index and income segregation using the dissimilarity index using data from the 2010 Brazilian demographic census. We found that 88.2% of COVID–19 mortality rates variability was between weeks, 8.5% between cities, and 3.3% between states. Higher-income inequality and higher-income segregation values were associated with higher COVID–19 mortality rates before and after accounting for all adjustment factors. In our main adjusted model, rate ratios (RR) per 1 SD increases in income inequality and income segregation were associated with 17% (95% CI 9% to 26%) and 11% (95% CI 4% to 19%) higher mortality. Income inequality and income segregation are long-standing hallmarks of large Brazilian cities. Risk factors related to the socioeconomic context affected the course of the pandemic in the country and contributed to high mortality rates. Pre-existing social vulnerabilities were critical factors in the aggravation of COVID–19, as supported by the observed associations in this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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13. Universal healthcare does not look the same everywhere: Divergent experiences with the private sector in Brazil and Thailand.
- Author
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Harris, Joseph and Libardi Maia, Juliana
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HEALTH policy ,PRIVATE sector ,HEALTH care reform ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH insurance ,PUBLIC sector ,INSTITUTIONAL care ,INSURANCE - Abstract
How does the private sector structure the trajectory of a country's universal healthcare programme? Social scientists have long pointed to the importance of path dependence in shaping health reform. Yet, rarely have middle-income countries' experience with the private sector under Universal Health Coverage (UHC) been examined from comparative perspective. In this paper, we explore the changing landscape of the health sector in Brazil and Thailand before UHC reform and after. We find path-dependent processes at work that have pushed two countries that both adopted UHC reforms in divergent directions. In Brazil, a comparatively large and entrenched private sector that existed before reform has grown over time, and a sizable private health insurance industry has exerted powerful influence on health policy, weakening the public sector. In Thailand, constraints on private health insurance growth and sustained investment in public health infrastructure and governance have helped check the growth of private sector influence, although battles over health policy still remain contentious. The experiences of these countries offer lessons for policymakers seeking to achieve and maintain robust UHC programmes in other contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. Sickle Cell Disease in Bahia, Brazil: The Social Production of Health Policies and Institutional Neglect.
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Mota, Clarice, Trad, Leny A. B., and Dikomitis, Lisa
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SICKLE cell anemia ,HEALTH policy ,BLACK people ,RACISM ,SOCIAL movements ,PARTICIPANT observation ,HEALTH equity - Abstract
A disease is considered neglected when it is not given due priority in health policies despite the social relevance of that disease, either in terms of the number of individuals affected by it or its morbidity or mortality. Although the causes are structural, neglect in health does not occur in a vacuum. In this paper, we explore how sickle cell disease (SCD) is constructed and neglected in Brazil, based on insights from our long-term participatory qualitative research in the state of Bahia. We present five overarching themes relevant to the social production of SCD, and associated health policies in Brazil: (1) The achievements and setbacks to overcome neglect in SCD, (2) Continuity of comprehensive SCD care; (3) Social movements of people with SCD; (4) Biocultural citizenship; and (5) Academic advocacy. We conclude that it is insufficient to merely recognize the health inequities that differentiate white and black populations in Brazil; racism must be understood as both a producer and a reproducer of this process of neglect. We conclude with a set of recommendations for the main SCD stakeholder groups committed to improving the lives of people living with SCD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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15. Indigenous engagement in health: lessons from Brazil, Chile, Australia and New Zealand.
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Ferdinand, Angeline, Lambert, Michelle, Trad, Leny, Pedrana, Leo, Paradies, Yin, and Kelaher, Margaret
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CONCEPTUAL structures ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,HEALTH policy ,MEDLINE ,NEEDS assessment ,ONLINE information services ,WORLD Wide Web ,HEALTH of indigenous peoples ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
Background: Given the persistence of Indigenous health inequities across national contexts, many countries have adopted strategies to improve the health of Indigenous peoples. Governmental recognition of the unique health needs of Indigenous populations is necessary for the development of targeted programs and policies to achieve universal health coverage. At the same time, the participation of Indigenous peoples in decision-making and program and policy design helps to ensure that barriers to health services are appropriately addressed and promotes the rights of Indigenous peoples to self-determination. Due to similar patterns of Indigenous health and health determinants across borders, there have been calls for greater global collaboration in this field. However, most international studies on Indigenous health policy link Anglo-settler democracies (Canada, Australia, Aotearoa/New Zealand and the United States), despite these countries representing a small fraction of the world's Indigenous people. Aim: This paper examines national-level policy in Australia, Brazil, Chile and New Zealand in relation to governmental recognition of differential Indigenous health needs and engagement with Indigenous peoples in health. The paper aims to examine how Indigenous health needs and engagement are addressed in national policy frameworks within each of the countries in order to contribute to the understanding of how to develop pro-equity policies within national health care systems. Methods: For each country, a review was undertaken of national policies and legislation to support engagement with, and participation of, Indigenous peoples in the identification of their health needs, development of programs and policies to address these needs and which demonstrate governmental recognition of differential Indigenous health needs. Government websites were searched as well as the following databases: Google, OpenGrey, CAB Direct, PubMed, Web of Science and WorldCat. Findings: Each of the four countries have adopted international agreements regarding the engagement of Indigenous peoples in health. However, there is significant variation in the extent to which the principles laid out in these agreements are reflected in national policy, legislation and practice. Brazil and New Zealand both have established national policies to facilitate engagement. In contrast, national policy to enable engagement is relatively lacking in Australia and Chile. Australia, Brazil and New Zealand each have significant initiatives and policy structures in place to address Indigenous health. However, in Brazil this is not necessarily reflected in practice and although New Zealand has national policies these have been recently reported as insufficient and, in fact, may be contributing to health inequity for Māori. In comparison to the other three countries, Chile has relatively few national initiatives or policies in place to support Indigenous engagement or recognise the distinct health needs of Indigenous communities. Conclusions: The adoption of international policy frameworks forms an important step in ensuring that Indigenous peoples are able to participate in the formation and implementation of health policy and programs. However, without the relevant principles being reflected in national legislature, international agreements hold little weight. At the same time, while a national legislative framework facilitates the engagement of Indigenous peoples, such policy may not necessarily translate into practice. Developing multi-level approaches that improve cohesion between international policy, national policy and practice in Indigenous engagement in health is therefore vital. Given that each of the four countries demonstrate strengths and weaknesses across this causal chain, cross-country policy examination provides guidance on strengthening these links. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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16. The potential synergies between industrial and health policies for access to medicines: insights from the Brazilian policy of universal access to HIV/AIDS treatment.
- Author
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Urias, Eduardo
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,HEALTH policy ,AIDS treatment ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to illustrate how industrial policy can support health policy through the construction of technological and innovation capabilities. This paper provides insights on this topic by examining the Brazilian ability to make patented antiretroviral (ARV) drugs universally accessible to people living with HIV/AIDS in the country. The Brazilian case study demonstrates the crucial role of industrial policy in making the use of compulsory licensing in price negotiations with pharmaceutical multinational corporations to improve the access to patented ARV drugs. The evidence presented in this paper supports that it is indeed possible to achieve synergies between industrial and health policy in order to improve the access to medicines and promote accumulation of technological capabilities in pharmaceuticals. Several policy instruments and initiatives, both horizontal and vertical, were implemented to support the industrial dimension of the successful Brazilian health strategy. These initiatives include direct support to capacity building, public procurement, and institutional changes. Furthermore, industrial policy initiatives can contribute to success of health programmes either immediately or with a time lag. Finally, the lessons learned from the Brazilian experience are re-specified and its relevance to other less developed countries, particularly those deprived of industrial capabilities, is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. Health-related knowledge production in Brazil: regional interaction networks and priority setting.
- Author
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Tomassini Urti, Cecilia, Bianchi, Carlos, and Couto Soares, Maria Clara
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PUBLIC health officers ,HEALTH policy ,POLICY sciences ,RESEARCH teams ,INDUSTRIAL capacity - Abstract
Sustaining and improving public health conditions require endogenous knowledge production capacities, a result of a dynamic interaction between researchers, public health officers and policy makers. In particular, in the context of high-socioeconomic inequality and diverse epidemiological profiles, the interaction between actors of the innovation system throughout the territory is necessary to identify and meet health demands. This paper presents an original contribution by addressing the changing composition and trends of regional health research networks in Brazil over time. Using Network Analysis techniques, we analysed data of over 100,000 research projects carried out in Brazil during the period of 2000–2015. We also studied the regional distribution of health research priority agendas as defined by the Ministry of Health. Our results show that despite the centralization of research capacity in the richest regions of the country, the interaction between leading research groups, both nationally and within the most disadvantaged regions, have been strengthened during the period of analysis. On the basis of this empirical evidence, the main contribution of the paper is to highlight the role of Health Policy and Science Technology and Innovation (STI) Policy, to inform knowledge production that meets public health needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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18. Backlash in global health and the end of AIDS' exceptionalism in Brazil, 2007–2019.
- Author
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Cueto, Marcos and Lopes, Gabriel
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AIDS prevention ,HEALTH policy ,HUMAN rights ,WORLD health ,PREVENTIVE health services ,SELF-efficacy ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,DRUGS ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
This paper examines the decline of the AIDS Programme in Brazil, the Latin American country most affected by the epidemic, with emphasis in the second decade of the twenty-first century. For many years, Brazil served as a model in Global Health due to a comprehensive preventive policy, a partnership between the government and health activists and the support of life-saving drugs as public goods rather than commodities. The regression of AIDS policies in Brazil interacted with developments in the United States as well as with multilateral agencies like UNAIDS that emphasised biomedicalisation in the response to the disease where broad human-rights programmes and alliance with activists were not priorities. International programmes like the 'Ending AIDS' campaign indirectly undermined the exceptional status AIDS enjoyed since the late 1980s. The backlash in Brazilian policies to fight AIDS was a result of the fragmentation of the left and the empowerment of radical conservative authoritarian and religious forces. The result was the breakdown of the long-held belief that successful anti-AIDS disease programmes could simultaneously help control the disease and build better healthcare systems and ultimately prompted the end of the special place AIDS' policy had in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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19. The public production of medicines in Brazil.
- Author
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Figueiredo TA, Fialho Neto RG, and Magalhães JL
- Subjects
- Brazil, Humans, Health Policy
- Abstract
The paper aims to contribute as a reflection on the public production of medicines in Brazil. Public producers present themselves as strategic in Brazil, either as price regulators, in meeting the demands of the Ministry of Health (MoH) on neglected products and those at risk of shortage to SUS. The study used the official bases of the MoH, National Health Surveillance Agency (ANVISA) and Website of Official Pharmaceutical Laboratories (OPL). Thirty-three OPL were identified, 16 with active production of drug registration at ANVISA. For the remaining 17 LFOs, no one identified active portfolio in the bases surveyed. There are 80% of the OPL portfolio concentrated in the first level of the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification, such as alimentary tract and metabolism, blood and blood forming organs, cardiovascular system, anti-infective for systemic use and nervous system. The OPL participation in the health complex is 48.6% of its portfolio dedicated to the strategic component, 30.6% for primary care and 20.7% for the specialized. It concludes the relevance of the OPL for the Brazilian health policy, with the better realignment of their potential in the face of technological advancement, health legislation, drug dependence and new treatment protocols.
- Published
- 2021
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20. AS POLÍTICAS DE ENFRENTAMENTO À PANDEMIA DE COVID-19 E DISTRIBUIÇÃO DE VACINAS NO BRASIL À LUZ DA TEORIA DA JUSTIÇA DE JOHN RAWLS.
- Author
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MONTEIRO DE BRITO FILHO, JOSÉ CLÁUDIO, GAMA MALCHER GODINHO, ALESSANDRA DA, and MIRANDA SOARES, TIAGO
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HEALTH policy ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LEGAL literature ,VACCINE development ,DISTRIBUTIVE justice ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Jurídica (0103-3506) is the property of Revista Juridica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
21. Beyond Institutional Racism? An analysis of the content of the Black Population Health Policy.
- Author
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Lima da Silva, Diego Francisco, Lyra, Tereza Maciel, Rosas da Silva, José Bento, and Faustino, Deivison Mendes
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INSTITUTIONAL racism ,BLACK people ,POPULATION policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH policy ,POPULATION health - Abstract
The concept of Institutional Racism (IR) gained emphasis in the late 1990s and the 2000s. It became one of the central terms in the discussion on racism and the Black Population Health. In Brazil, this category hegemonically influences the understanding of racism in health studies and debates. This qualitative case study paper analyzes the incorporation of the IR concept in Brazil in implementing the National Comprehensive Health Policy for the Black Population. Government documents from the Ministry of Health and the Institute of Applied Economic Research were analyzed. Although the formal inclusion of the discussion about IR in the public policy agenda in the early 21st century is a great achievement, apprehending this fact in isolation disregards the dialectical interaction between individual, institutional, and structural forms in the racialization dehumanizing process. Thus, combating IR depends on facing the reasons that lead institutions to reproduce racism and its consequences on access to housing, work, education, and health services and actions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. Health regionalization and federative cooperation in Brazil: the role of inter-municipal consortium.
- Author
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Lui L, Schabbach LM, and Nora CRD
- Subjects
- Brazil, Humans, Health Policy, Public Health
- Abstract
This paper aims to investigate public inter-municipal health consortium operation in Brazil. To this end, a qualitative documentary analysis was conducted on the content of the agreements between the consortia and the Federal Government, available at the Transparency Portal of the Federal Government, from 1996 to 2016. The results cover two categories: agreements concluded in Brazil and the content of the agreements signed by an inter-municipal public consortium (CIS). The agreements signed were concentrated mainly in the Southern and Southeastern regions and aimed to carry out regional actions, thus contributing to health regionalization. However, challenges related to the process of cooperation and coordination between the health management bodies persist, mainly related to the improvement of linkages between the consortium and the regional health coordination and in-depth social control of these organizations.
- Published
- 2020
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23. Health reform and Indigenous health policy in Brazil: contexts, actors and discourses.
- Author
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de M Pontes AL and Santos RV
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- Brazil, Delivery of Health Care, Humans, Population Groups, Health Care Reform, Health Policy
- Abstract
Given the challenges related to reducing socio-economic and health inequalities, building specific health system approaches for Indigenous peoples is critical. In Brazil, following constitutional reforms that led to the universalization of health care in the late 1980s, a specific health subsystem was created for Indigenous peoples in 1999. In this paper, we use a historical perspective to contextualize the creation of the Indigenous Health Subsystem in Brazil. This study is based on data from interviews with Indigenous and non-Indigenous subjects and document-based analysis. In the 1980s, during the post-dictatorship period in Brazil, the emergence of Indigenous movements in the country and the support for pro-Indigenous organizations helped establish a political agenda that emphasized a broad range of issues, including the right to a specific health policy. Indigenous leaders established alliances with participants of the Brazilian health reform movement, which resulted in broad debates about the specificities of Indigenous peoples, and the need for a specific health subsystem. We highlight three main points in our analysis: (1) the centrality of a holistic health perspective; (2) the emphasis on social participation; (3) the need for the reorganization of health care. These points proved to be convergent with the development of the Brazilian health reform and were expressed in documents of the Indigenist Missionary Council (CIMI) and the Union of Indigenous Nations (UNI). They were also consolidated in the final report of the First National Conference on the Protection of Indigenous Health in 1986, becoming the cornerstone of the national Indigenous health policy declared in 1999. Our analysis reveals that Indigenous people and pro-Indigenous groups were key players in the development of the Indigenous Health Subsystem in Brazil., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.)
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
24. Medical populism and the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Lasco G
- Subjects
- Betacoronavirus, Brazil, COVID-19, Humans, Pandemics, Philippines, SARS-CoV-2, United States, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Health Policy, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Politics, Public Health
- Abstract
This paper uses the vocabulary of 'medical populism' to identify and analyse the political constructions of (and responses to) the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil, the Philippines, and the United States from January to mid-July 2020, particularly by the countries' heads of state: Jair Bolsonaro, Rodrigo Duterte, and Donald Trump. In all three countries, the leaders' responses to the outbreak can be characterised by the following features: simplifying the pandemic by downplaying its impacts or touting easy solutions or treatments, spectacularizing their responses to crisis, forging divisions between the 'people' and dangerous 'others', and making medical knowledge claims to support the above. Taken together, the case studies illuminate the role of individual political actors in defining public health crises, suggesting that medical populism is not an exceptional, but a familiar response to them. This paper concludes by offering recommendations for global health in anticipating and responding to pandemics and infectious disease outbreaks.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Impact of the dog population and household environment for the maintenance of natural foci of Leishmania infantum transmission to human and animal hosts in endemic areas for visceral leishmaniasis in Sao Paulo state, Brazil.
- Author
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Matsumoto, Patricia Sayuri Silvestre, Hiramoto, Roberto Mitsuyoshi, Pereira, Virgínia Bodelão Richini, Camprigher, Valéria Medina, Taniguchi, Helena Hilomi, de Raeffray Barbosa, José Eduardo, Cortez, Luiz Ricardo Paes de Barros, Fonseca, Elivelton da Silva, Guimarães, Raul Borges, and Tolezano, José Eduardo
- Subjects
VISCERAL leishmaniasis ,LEISHMANIASIS ,ENDEMIC animals ,LEISHMANIA infantum ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,HEALTH policy ,HOUSEHOLDS ,DOG diseases - Abstract
When it comes to visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in Brazil, one of the main targets of public health policies of surveillance is the control of domestic canine reservoirs of Leishmania infantum. This paper aims to evaluate the effect of the dog population and household environment for the maintenance of natural foci in the transmission to human and animal hosts in an endemic city for VL, Bauru, in Brazil. We collected 6,578 blood samples of dogs living in 3,916 households from Nov.2019 to Mar.2020 and applied geospatial models to predict the disease risk based on the canine population. We used Kernel density estimation, cluster analysis, geostatistics, and Generalized Additive Models (GAM). To validate our models, we used cross-validation and created a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve. We found an overall canine VL (CVL) seroprevalence of 5.6% for the sampled dogs, while for the households, the positivity rate was 8.7%. Odds ratios (OR) for CVL increased progressively according to the number of canines for >2 dogs (OR 2.70); households that already had CVL in the past increased the chances for CVL currently (OR 2.73); and the cases of CVL increase the chances for human VL cases (OR 1.16). Our models were statistically significant and demonstrated a spatial association between canine and human disease cases, mainly in VL foci that remain endemic. Although the Kernel density ratio map had the best performance (AUC = 82), all the models showed high risk in the city's northwest area. Canine population dynamics must be considered in public policies, and geospatial methods may help target priority areas and planning VL surveillance in low and middle-income countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Determinants of physical distancing during the covid-19 epidemic in Brazil: effects from mandatory rules, numbers of cases and duration of rules.
- Author
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Moraes RF
- Subjects
- Brazil epidemiology, COVID-19, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Government Regulation, Humans, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Time Factors, Coronavirus Infections prevention & control, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Pandemics prevention & control, Pneumonia, Viral prevention & control, Social Isolation
- Abstract
During the covid-19 pandemic, physical distancing is being promoted to reduce the disease transmission and pressure on health systems. Yet, what determines physical distancing? Through a panel data analysis, this article identifies some of its determinants. Using a specifically built index that measures the strictness of physical distancing rules in the 27 Brazilian states, this paper isolates the effect of mandatory physical distancing rules from other potential determinants of physical distancing. The article concludes that physical distancing is influenced by at least three variables: the strictness of mandatory physical distancing rules, the number of confirmed cases of covid-19, and the duration of rules. Evidence also indicates that the effect of physical distancing measures is relatively stronger than that of the number of cases -physical distancing is determined proportionally more by mandatory policies than people's awareness about the severity of the epidemic. These results have at least two policy implications. First, governments should adopt mandatory measures in order to increase physical distancing - rather than expect people to adopt them on their own. Second, the timing of adopting them is important, since people are unlikely to comply with them for long periods of time.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Meeting the complex challenge of health and social care provision for rapidly-ageing populations: introducing the concept of "avoidable displacement from home".
- Author
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Lloyd-Sherlock P, Billings J, Aredes JS, Freire Neto JB, Camarano AA, Macedo Coelho Filho J, Firmo JOA, Kalache A, Macinko J, Sempé L, and Giacomin KC
- Subjects
- Brazil, Healthy Aging, Health Policy, Policy Making
- Abstract
The increasing numbers of people at very old ages pose specific policy challenges for health and social care and highlight the need to rethink established models of service provision. The main objective of this paper is to introduce the concept of "avoidable displacement from home" (ADH). The study argues that ADH builds on and adds value to existing concepts, offering a holistic, person-centered framework for integrated health and social care provision for older people. It also demonstrates that this framework can be applied across different levels, ranging from macro policymaking to organizational and individual decision-making. The paper pays attention to the Brazilian context but argues that ADH is a universally applicable concept.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. National Primary Health Care Policy: where are we headed to?
- Author
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Giovanella L, Franco CM, and Almeida PF
- Subjects
- Brazil, Community Health Services, General Practice education, Healthcare Disparities trends, Humans, Patient Care Team, Family Health trends, Health Policy trends, National Health Programs trends, Primary Health Care trends
- Abstract
This paper analyzes recent policies in the field of Primary Health Care (PHC) and their possible implications for the care model in the Unified Health System (SUS). Initially, some of the concepts that influenced the models of care in the Brazilian public system are revived, and we argue that the Family Health Strategy (ESF) bases for reorienting care practices in primary care are consistent with the principles of the SUS. Below, we analyze the central elements of new federal policies for PHC. We show that changes in the PHC care model threaten the teams' multidisciplinarity, prioritize acute illness care, focus in individual care, weaken the community territorial approach and establish coverage by registration, which evidence redirection of the health policy, harming the principles of universality, integrality, and equity in the SUS.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Litigation to Access Health Services: Ally or Enemy of Global Public Health?
- Author
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Martins A and Allen S
- Subjects
- Africa, Brazil, Constitution and Bylaws, Humans, Policy Making, Global Health legislation & jurisprudence, Health Policy, Health Services Accessibility legislation & jurisprudence, Jurisprudence, Public Health legislation & jurisprudence, Right to Health legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
Background: Some scholars and global health advocates argue that litigation is a strategy to advance public health care, especially in those countries that do not have specific legislation to guarantee access to basic health care services. However, strategic litigation has another side, known as judicialization of the right to health, particularly present in the Latin American region where most countries incorporate the right to health into their constitutions, but their citizens still struggle with health disparities., Objectives: Considering these two perspectives on litigation in health care, this paper examines the phenomenon of litigation in health care and its impact on public health in Brazil, where there is an ambiguous process of litigation in health care., Methods: Comparing the literature of both the use of strategic litigation for advancing public health and the judicialization of the right to health, this paper develops an ethical analysis of the impacts of strategic litigation for individuals and societies, using Brazil's public health care system and its policies as case-study of the impact of court decisions on the management of the system., Findings: Supporters of strategic litigation present experiences in African countries using this strategy to access a specific medical service led to enforce the creation of health-related policies by authorities and policymakers. However, in Brazil, a country with the right to health guaranteed by its Constitution, strategic litigation creates access to health care for some individuals, but also results in complex sociomedical challenges with significant impact for public administration and distributive justice., Conclusions: Strategic litigation can lead to ambiguous results, which will depend on the local context and the existence or not of public health services and health-related policies. When this strategy is considered, ethical analysis helps to understand how litigation can both benefit and damage individuals' health and the public health system in the complex context and diverse reality of Brazil. As a result, strategic litigation must be considered from an ethical perspective of prudence and discernment in a close interaction with the local reality, its particular circumstances, culture, policies, and laws., Competing Interests: The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2020
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30. Discretion, power and the reproduction of inequality in health policy implementation: Practices, discursive styles and classifications of Brazil's community health workers.
- Author
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Nunes J and Lotta G
- Subjects
- Anthropology, Cultural methods, Brazil, Community Health Workers trends, Healthcare Disparities trends, Humans, Qualitative Research, Community Health Workers legislation & jurisprudence, Health Policy trends, Healthcare Disparities legislation & jurisprudence, Policy Making, Power, Psychological
- Abstract
This article explores the mobilization of power by health workers during policy implementation, showing how in a context of discretion and resource scarcity they can reproduce inequalities in access to health services. The argument innovates theoretically by supplementing the 'street-level bureaucracy' literature, which emphasizes frontline worker discretion, with a conceptualization of power as domination encompassing the shaping of behavior, the constitution of subjects and the reproduction of inequality. Empirically, the article focuses on Brazilian community health workers (agentes comunitários desaúde, CHWs). CHWs are a neglected but highly important segment of the health workforce that traditionally functions as a link between the health system and disadvantaged groups. The article examines how Brazilian CHWs act as street-level bureaucrats mobilizing power in their interactions with users. They operate within a severely under-resourced public health system, the Sistema Único de Saúde, which places constraints upon their action and forces them to make allocation decisions with little training and support. The article highlights the ways in which inequalities in access to health services are reproduced (inadvertently or not) through the practices, discursive styles and classifications of CHWs. Methodologically, the paper is based on ethnography with 24 CHWs and interviews with 77 other CHWs in Brazil., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
31. Do government audits reduce dengue? Estimating the impact of federal monitoring lotteries program on dengue incidence.
- Author
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Benini Duarte G, de Souza Melo A, and Firmino Costa da Silva D
- Subjects
- Brazil epidemiology, Cities, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Dengue epidemiology, Dengue prevention & control, Government Programs, Health Policy, Incidence
- Abstract
The paper examines the relationship between the supervision carried out in the municipalities by the main Brazilan supervisory institution (Controladoria Geral da União-CGU, in portuguese) and the incidence of dengue cases in them. Since the audited municipalities were randomized, this allows the identification of a control group that adequately represents the counterfactual of the treated group. The sample was composed of all municipalities that could be selected for that CGU inspection cycle, that is, 1520 municipalities, of which 70 were drawn and therefore belong to the study treatment group. We identified a negative effect of the policy on the incidence of the disease. However, when we consider a model with lags, we note that this initial impact from the drawing did not persist throughout the year of the inspection. Our analysis suggests that when federal resources are monitored, municipalities reduce irregularities, which may contribute to a decrease in the number of dengue cases.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Sticks and Pills: Governance Patterns of HIV/Aids medication in India and Brazil.
- Author
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Lütz, Susanne and Eimer, Thomas R.
- Subjects
- *
AIDS treatment , *HIV infections , *THERAPEUTICS , *DRUG therapy , *DRUG prices , *HEALTH policy , *PUBLIC goods - Abstract
A research paper about governance patterns of HIV/AIDS medication in India and Brazil is presented which is to be discussed at the Annual Meetings of the American Political Science Association, in Toronto, Ontario, from September 3-6, 2009. The paper discusses topics including the availability of affordable HIV/AIDS drugs in India and Brazil, and the effects of private self-regulation and governmental intervention for the provision of public goods.
- Published
- 2009
33. O ensino na graduação em saúde coletiva: o que dizem os projetos pedagógicos.
- Author
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de Souza Mendonça, Paula Beatriz and Lima de Castro, Janete
- Subjects
BACHELOR'S degree ,NATIONAL curriculum ,HEALTH policy ,ANTHROPOSOPHY ,PUBLIC health ,INTERNSHIP programs - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ciência & Saúde Coletiva is the property of Associacao Brasileira de Pos-Graduacao em Saude Coletiva and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Judicialização da saúde, acesso a medicamentos e diálogos institucionais.
- Author
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dos Santos Rodrigues, Daniel and da Silva Lima, Jordão Horácio
- Subjects
PROBLEM solving ,FEDERAL courts ,HEALTH policy ,APPELLATE courts ,ACCESS to justice - Abstract
Copyright of A&C - Administrative & Constitutional Law Review - Revista de Direito Administrativo e Constitucional is the property of A&C - Revista de Direito Administrativo & Constitucional (Instituto Bacellar) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Monitoring the implementation of a Municipal Policy on Complementary and Integrative Practices: the main challenges.
- Author
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Ignatti, Carmencita and Nakamura, Eunice
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,ETHNOLOGY ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
Copyright of Physis: Revista de Saúde Coletiva is the property of CEPESC and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Reflections on the judicialization of the right to health and its implications in the SUS.
- Author
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Paixão ALSD
- Subjects
- Brazil, Delivery of Health Care economics, Hemophilia A therapy, Humans, National Health Programs economics, Delivery of Health Care legislation & jurisprudence, Health Policy, Human Rights legislation & jurisprudence, National Health Programs legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
This paper presents the issue of judicialization of the right to health in Brazil. Data from the National Council of Justice evidence a substantial increase in the number of lawsuits concerning the right to health. We emphasize that the national doctrine exhaustively discusses ways to make the authority more effective, but it does not, as a general rule, discuss the economic aspect of health judicialization. Using the concept of opportunity cost extracted from economics science, it is shown that the judge, by deferring the lawsuit formulated by the plaintiff, automatically forces the Executive Branch to reduce the scope of other policies to generate resources to meet the court order. In specific contexts, this setting ends up favoring individual rights at the expense of the collective rights of SUS users, in violation of the principle of isonomy and efficiency. Finally, the case of the judicialization promoted by the hemophiliac patients in the Federal District is shown as a way of evidencing, at the factual level, the consequences of judicialization in the SUS policies.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Brazilian social protection and demands of children and adolescent cancer treatment.
- Author
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Huesca IM, Vargas EP, and Cruz MMD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Brazil, Child, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Humans, Delivery of Health Care legislation & jurisprudence, Health Policy, Neoplasms therapy, Public Policy
- Abstract
This article discusses the issue of social protection against the demands presented in the treatment of children and adolescents in Brazil. It aims to problematize the advances and limits of the Brazilian social protection system in face of the social demands arising from the treatment of children and adolescents that go beyond the specific limits of health care. It is a qualitative study that was structured based on the analysis of official documents, Laws, Decrees, Ordinances and Policies and the literature destined to children and adolescents in cancer treatment whose incapacitating consequences produce social demands that impact, above all, family life. The paper presents social policies as a fundamental resource for treatment, considering the demand for income and displacement, in order to enable an effective health care. However, the reflections indicate that there is now a retraction of social policies by the State that was expressed in the focus and transfer of responsibilities of the State to other sectors of civil society.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Potencialities of ciberspaSUS: social networks as devices of public health policies in Brazil.
- Author
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Ferigato SH, Teixeira RR, Cavalcanti FOL, and Depole BF
- Subjects
- Brazil, Cooperative Behavior, Humans, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Public Policy, Qualitative Research, Health Policy, Internet, National Health Programs organization & administration, Social Networking
- Abstract
Objective: This paper examines two experiences of social networks developed as a space for strengthening public health policies in the Brazilian context. To describe and analyze some possibilities of using social networks as devices linked to public health policies based on the experience of two comparative cases currently underway in Brazil: The HumanizaSUS Network and the Community of Primary Care Practices., Methods: This is qualitative research with a comparative case study approach, with emphasis on the exploitation of data available in the public platform of both networks and publications around these two experiences., Results: Webometric data of the cases studied will be shown, pointing out aspects of differentiation and similarity between them from three axes of analysis: (1) theoretical-conceptual framework; (2) the design of the platform, its functionalities and its daily support process; (3) the singularities of the related policies. The discussion of these points indicates that social networks can function as devices for education, production of a collection of experiences, clinical collaboration and especially a collaborative creation of spaces for sharing experiences and collective reflection on the daily construction of public policy.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Skateholders, spaces and policy network in health governance in two health regions of Legal Amazon.
- Author
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Casanova AO, Giovanella L, Cruz MMD, and Ferreira MFDC
- Subjects
- Brazil, Government Programs organization & administration, Humans, Social Networking, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Health Policy, Public Policy
- Abstract
Governance is a concept with different hues in public policies. In this study, it is conceived as a policy network, with stakeholders who manage interests depending on available resources, mediated by rules and by their degree of influence. This paper analyzes the stakeholders, spaces of articulation, norms, and processes in health governance in two regions of the Legal Amazon and how managers shape their social network. This is a qualitative study with regional analysis plan, using as sources documents and interviews. An analysis matrix was formulated with adapted realms of conceptual models of governance and policy networks. Results point to differentiated policy networks. In the metropolitan region, stakeholders' diversity was more associated with state management and capital, given the articulation capacity and available resources. In the international border region, the policy network of municipal managers integrates stakeholders from diverse sectors in the face of regional specificity and articulation capacity. Regions, living territories, single out technical processes, leading stakeholders to seek partners and spaces beyond those established, to weave strategies closer to reality.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Methodological challenges in researching activism in action: civil society engagement towards health for all.
- Author
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Bodini, Chiara, Baum, Fran, Labonté, Ronald, Legge, David, Sanders, David, and Sengupta, Amit
- Subjects
ACTION research ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care use ,HEALTH policy ,POLITICAL participation ,PUBLIC administration ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL change ,PATIENT participation ,CONSUMER activism ,HEALTH literacy - Abstract
Civil society engagement around health care and population health improvement is an important driver towards Health for All. Research can improve the effectiveness of health activism by examining the resources, structures and strategies of civil society engagement. However, research to support such engagement faces epistemological and methodological challenges which call for specific research strategies. A four year multi-country study was undertaken by the People's Health Movement, a global network working for health for all. The research took place in six countries (Brazil, Colombia, DR Congo, India, Italy, South Africa) and globally, and was directed to understanding five domains of civil society engagement: movement building; campaigning and advocacy; capacity building; knowledge generation, access and use; and engaging with governance. The research plan and methods of data collection and analysis were tailored to address the objective of improving activist practice, while negotiating research challenges identified during the design phase. Results include insights into the practice of civil society engagement in relation to the five domains of activist practice, as well as experience gained in managing six methodological challenges which we describe as: making meaning, aligning research and action, managing power relations, valuing experiential knowledges, chaos and contingency, challenging preconceptions. Researching activism can produce useful insights into practice as well as support continuous improvement in the effectiveness of such activism. However, there are significant methodological challenges that can be addressed through appropriate strategies. More research, building on the approach described in this paper, can contribute to more effective civil society activism for health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. O gasto e as fontes do financiamento do SUS nos municípios brasileiros de 2003 a 2018.
- Author
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Crozatti, Jaime, de Lima Junior, Albires Ferreira, Nascimento Lima, Leandro, Lima de Oliveira, Luana, and Righetto, Patricia
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,PUBLIC hospitals ,HOSPITAL care ,PRIMARY care ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ambiente Contábil is the property of Revista Ambiente Contabil and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Análise da implantação do Programa Nacional de Controle da Dengue: estudo comparativo de municípios fronteiriços de Mato Grosso do Sul (Brasil).
- Author
-
da Silva Costa, Elisângela Martins and Aparecido da Costa, Edgar
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MUNICIPAL government ,SEMI-structured interviews ,ARBOVIRUS diseases ,DENGUE viruses - Abstract
Copyright of Cuadernos de Geografia: Revista Colombiana de Geografía is the property of Universidad Nacional de Colombia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Relationships between scientific production and public policies: the case of indigenous people's health in the field of collective health.
- Author
-
Fernandes Kabad, Juliana, de Moura Pontes, Ana Lúcia, and Monteiro, Simone
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples ,HEALTH equity ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SCIENCE databases ,WEB databases ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
This paper analyses the relationship between studies on the health of indigenous people in public health and public policies aimed at reducing ethnic-racial inequalities. This selection assumes that scientific production on the subject is part of the societal effort to confront health inequities and guarantee the rights and public policies of indigenous people. In total, 3,417 papers were found between 1956 and 2018, and 418 were selected for analysis from systematic literature mapping in the PubMed/Medline, Scopus, Lilacs, Sociological Abstract, and Web of Science databases. Initially, the literature is marked by the biomedical benchmark. After 1990, publications and dialogue with the human and social sciences are expanded, including the analysis of the implementation of indigenous health policy. We identified that the knowledge produced is associated with the political, social, and scientific transformations of the health reform and the indigenous agenda. Scientific production increased in 2010. We can conclude that the knowledge guiding the scientific production on indigenous health was established from a horizon politically implicated with the studied populations and improved Indigenous Health Subsystem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Primary Prison Care Teams and tuberculosis notification in Rio Grande do Sul/Brazil.
- Author
-
Dotta, Renata Maria, Zennatti, Karine, Luana Veriato, Águida, Marques, Marden, Stehmann, Péricles, Busatto, Caroline, and Possuelo, Lia Gonçalves
- Subjects
PRIMARY care ,PRIMARY health care ,EQUITY management ,HEALTH equity ,TUBERCULOSIS ,HEALTH policy ,TEAMS - Abstract
This paper aims to describe the implementation process of the Prison Primary Care Teams in Rio Grande do Sul, the frequency of tuberculosis notifications in people deprived of liberty, and their chronological relationship. This documentary research is nested in a descriptive cross- sectional study of historical series. We analyzed the decrees on the qualification of Prison Primary Care Teams, the number, and the year of notification of tuberculosis cases from the National System of Notifiable Diseases from 2014 to 2020. The state of Rio Grande do Sul pioneered prison health municipalization and shared financing, which resulted in the implementation of 45 teams, covering approximately 54.5% of people deprived of liberty a closed regime. The teams notified 5,175 cases of tuberculosis from 2014 to 2020, with a progressive increase in the notification of cases and the implementation of new teams. The strategy of implementing Prison Primary Care Teams driven by the National Comprehensive Health Care Policy for People Deprived of Liberty in the Prison System was crucial for increasing TB diagnosis, notification, and control in Rio Grande do Sul. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Institutions and the politics of agency in COVID-19 response: Federalism, executive power, and public health policy in Brazil, India, and the U.S.
- Author
-
GREER, SCOTT L., FONSECA, ELIZE MASSARD, RAJ, MINAKSHI, and WILLISON, CHARLEY E.
- Subjects
ADMINISTRATIVE law ,IMMUNIZATION ,MEDICAL protocols ,INFECTION control ,HEALTH policy ,LEADERSHIP ,LIFE expectancy ,BEHAVIOR ,CONFIDENCE ,GOVERNMENT aid ,VOTING ,EPIDEMICS ,PUBLIC health ,PRACTICAL politics ,HEALTH equity ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 was one of the rare events that shocked almost every world government simultaneously, thus creating an unusual opportunity to understand how political institutions shape policy decisions. There have been many analyses of what governments did. We focus instead on what they could do, focusing on the institutional politics of agency – how institutions empower rather than how they constrain, and how they affect public policy decisions. We examine public health measures in the first wave (March-September 2020) in Brazil, India, and the U.S. to understand how the interplay of institutions in a complex federal context shaped COVID-19 policy-responses. We find similar patterns of concentrated federal executive agency with limited constraints. In each case, when federal leadership failed public health policy responses, federated, subnational states were left to compensate for these inefficiencies without necessary resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A judicialização do direito à saúde e a norma de proporcionalidade: o problema dos medicamentos e serviços não incorporados ao Sistema Único de Saúde e dos medicamentos sem registro na Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária
- Author
-
Freitas de Almeida, Luiz Antônio
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH policy , *APPELLATE courts , *MEDICAL care , *JUSTICE administration - Abstract
This paper deals with the judicialization of the right to health, a phenomenon that provokes several studies in different perspectives. The Brazilian Supreme Court will judge two appeals (Recursos Extraordinários n. 566.471/RN e n. 657.718/MG) of great importance to guide the rest of the Judiciary branch, what reveals the actuality of the theme. In Brazil, the legal principles, especially because of the contribution offered by Robert Alexy's theory of principles, are being used by courts to decide concrete cases. In the case of right to health, this principle is invoked to provide medicaments or services not included in health's public policies. The balancing used, however, lacks of a formal structure offered by proportionality norm, a legal principle in David Duarte's vision, adopted in this study. This paper suggests how to apply the proportionality test to judge cases of right to health and integral health care, a material principle of the Brazilian Health System, with support in the Norman Daniels' concept of health. It identifies the kind of normative conflict and the correct form to structure the proportionality norm to examine positive duties arising from the right to health, in order to conclude when there will be a violation of this right. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
47. Exploring challenges, threats and innovations in global health promotion.
- Author
-
Massuda, Adriano, Titton, Cesar, and Moysés, Simone Tetu
- Subjects
HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL education ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,HUMAN rights ,HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,PRACTICAL politics ,QUALITY assurance ,SCIENCE ,TECHNOLOGY ,WORLD health ,HEALTH care industry ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,WELL-being ,AT-risk people ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Global health faces a broad spectrum of old and new challenges. Besides epidemiological problems, political conflicts, economic crisis and austerity policies are jeopardizing progress towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC), affecting the most vulnerable populations. During the 22nd International Union for Health Promotion and Education (IUHPE) World Conference on Health Promotion held in Curitiba, Brazil, in 2016, challenges and threats for global health, in addition to a wide range of innovative experiences in health promotion, were discussed with participants from 65 countries. At the end of the conference, a public statement was approved claiming for Democracy and Human Rights in all countries around the world as essential conditions for the promotion of health and equity. In this paper, we explore challenges, threats and innovations in global health promotion. We use scientific literature, analysis of the current situation of the Brazilian health system, and material presented during the 22nd IUHPE World Conference. Also, we discuss strategies to strengthen health systems, policies and practices through the approach of STI and illustrative local experiences presented at the congress mentioned above, including examples developed in the city of Curitiba. We conclude that STI is crucial to support strengthening local health systems, design effective intersectoral public policies, scaling up innovative initiates, and skilling staff in addressing the contemporary challenges. Finally, the Declaration of the 22nd World Conference on Health Promotion of the IUHPE is a fundamental policy statement based on the prioritization of democracy and human rights as essential conditions for the promotion of health and equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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48. Applying the ICF linking rules to compare population-based data from different sources: an exemplary analysis of tools used to collect information on disability.
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de Moura, Lenildo, dos Santos, Wederson Rufino, Castro, Shamyr Sulyvan de, Ito, Elizabeth, da Luz e Silva, Danilo Campos, Yokota, Renata Tiene de Carvalho, Abaakouk, Zohra, Corrêa Filho, Heleno Rodrigues, Gomes Pérez, Marco Antonio, Fellinghauer, Carolina Saskia, and Sabariego, Carla
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FUNCTIONAL assessment ,DATABASE management ,DECISION making ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HUMAN rights ,LIFE skills ,MATHEMATICAL models ,HEALTH policy ,NOSOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DATA analysis ,ACQUISITION of data ,ATTITUDES toward disabilities ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,EQUIPMENT & supplies - Abstract
Background: Data on disability are regularly collected by different institutions or ministries using specific tools for different purposes, for instance to estimate the prevalence of disability or eligibility of specific populations for social benefits. The interoperability of disability data collected in countries is essential for policy making and to monitor the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. The first objective of this paper is to map and compare tools that collect data on disability for different purposes, more specifically the Brazilian National Health Survey and the Brazilian Functioning Index to the World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Bank Model Disability Survey (MDS), currently recommended as a standard tool for disability measurement. The second objective is to demonstrate the usefulness and value of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health Linking Rules to map and compare population-based surveys and other content-related tools collecting data on disability, even when these have already been developed based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health. Methods: Disability information collected with the three different tools was mapped and compared using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health Linking Rules. Results: Although the disability module in the Brazilian National Health Survey is fundamentally different from the MDS, the mapping disclosed that several modules of the Brazilian National Health Survey already cover many aspects necessary to estimate prevalence and understand disability as currently recommended by the WHO and the World Bank. The Brazilian Functioning Index and the MDS are both based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health and are very similar in the approach and content of their questions on functioning. Specific information on environmental factors is essential to identify needs and barriers, as well as to devise procedures to reduce injustice and inequalities. This information is still not targeted broadly enough in both the Brazilian National Health Survey and the Brazilian Functioning Index. Conclusions: Overall, this mapping exercise showed that applying the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health linking rules to population-based data coming from different sources provides researchers and stakeholders involved in decision-making with standardized and straightforward information about overlaps and gaps. Implications for Rehabilitation: Data on functioning and disability regularly collected with different purposes and by different institutions or ministries within a country can be compared using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health as a reference framework and the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health linking rules. The recently published refinements of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health Linking Rules go beyond the sole linking to International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health categories and provide standardized procedures to document the perspective of linked questions or the categorization of response options. They are therefore useful to compared tools that have been developed based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health. The current disability module of the Brazilian Health Survey needs a revision to be suitable to collect data on disability that is Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities conform and guarantees interoperability with disability data from other sources in Brazil, especially from disability assessment for social benefits and implementation of policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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49. INSERÇÃO DO ASSISTENTE SOCIAL NA POLÍTICA PÚBLICA DE SAÚDE: ABORDAGENS E PERSPECTIVAS.
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GUERRA, L. C. B. and AQUINO, V. M.
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MEDICAL personnel ,SOCIAL workers ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH care reform ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
Copyright of HOLOS is the property of Instituto Federal do Rio Grande do norte - IFRN and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2019
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50. Challenges and Prospects for Integrating the Assessment of Health Impacts in the Licensing Process of Large Capital Project in Brazil.
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de Souza Hacon, Sandra, Santos Périssé, André Reynaldo, Simos, Jean, Cantoreggi, Nicola Luca, and Winkler, Mirko Severin
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NURSING assessment ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,LICENSE agreements - Abstract
Brazil was one of the first countries in Latin America to institutionalize a National Environmental Policy in 1981, including the environmental impact assessment (EIA) process of economic activities with anticipated impacts on the environment. Today, EIA practice in Brazil comes with a number of limitations: it is constrained by its environmental advocacy role; application is strongly oriented towards large capital projects; and social responsibility considerations are only partially included. Consequently, EIA studies mainly address issues connected to localised and direct environmental impacts, largely ignoring any socio-economic and health impacts. This perspective paper highlights limitations of current EIA practice in Brazil with a focus on health considerations in impact assessment. While recognizing the positive impact to municipalities where large capital projects are being developed and operated, adverse impacts on health are a reality with measurable evidence in Brazil. Therefore, we argue that specificities on how to systematically assess and monitor potential health impacts cannot remain invisible in the Brazilian legislation, as currently seen in the reformulation of the licensing process in the country. The process of better integrating the assessment of health impacts in the licensing process of large capital project in Brazil must, however, not be based on the imposition of an external model but should be promoted by internal stakeholders from the environmental and health sector, incorporating the experiences gained in various case studies from all over the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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