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3.
Am J Public Health ; 91(10): 1592-601, 2001 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11574316

RESUMEN

The accomplishments of Latin American social medicine remain little known in the English-speaking world. In Latin America, social medicine differs from public health in its definitions of populations and social institutions, its dialectic vision of "health-illness," and its stance on causal inference. A "golden age" occurred during the 1930s, when Salvador Allende, a pathologist and future president of Chile, played a key role. Later influences included the Cuban revolution, the failed peaceful transition to socialism in Chile, the Nicaraguan revolution, liberation theology, and empowerment strategies in education. Most of the leaders of Latin American social medicine have experienced political repression, partly because they have tried to combine theory and political practice--a combination known as "praxis." Theoretic debates in social medicine take their bearings from historical materialism and recent trends in European philosophy. Methodologically, differing historical, quantitative, and qualitative approaches aim to avoid perceived problems of positivism and reductionism in traditional public health and clinical methods. Key themes emphasize the effects of broad social policies on health and health care; the social determinants of illness and death; the relationships between work, reproduction, and the environment; and the impact of violence and trauma.


Asunto(s)
Administración en Salud Pública/historia , Medicina Social/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , América Latina
4.
Int J Health Serv ; 31(3): 495-505, 2001.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11562002

RESUMEN

As their expansion slows in the United States, managed care organizations will continue to enter new markets abroad. Investors view the opening of managed care in Latin America as a lucrative business opportunity. As public-sector services and social security funds are cut back, privatized, and reorganized under managed care, with the support of international lending agencies such as the World Bank, the effects of these reforms on access to preventive and curative services will hold great importance throughout the developing world. Many groups in Latin America are working on alternative projects that defend health as a public good, and similar movements have begun in Africa and Asia. Increasingly, this organizing is being recognized not only as part of a class struggle but also as part of a struggle against economic imperialism--which has now taken on the new appearance of rescuing less developed countries from rising health care costs and inefficient bureaucracies through the imposition of neoliberal managed-care solutions exported from the United States.


Asunto(s)
Emprendimiento/tendencias , Sector de Atención de Salud/tendencias , Programas Controlados de Atención en Salud/economía , Naciones Unidas/economía , Países en Desarrollo/economía , Eficiencia Organizacional/economía , Reforma de la Atención de Salud/economía , Humanos , América Latina , Programas Controlados de Atención en Salud/estadística & datos numéricos , Política , Valores Sociales , Bienestar Social/economía , Bienestar Social/tendencias , Estados Unidos
5.
Lancet ; 358(9278): 315-23, 2001 Jul 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11498235

RESUMEN

There is little knowledge about Latin American social medicine in the English-speaking world. Social medicine groups exist in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, and Mexico. Dictatorships have created political and economic conditions which are more adverse in some countries than others; in certain instances, practitioners of social medicine have faced unemployment, arrest, torture, exile, and death. Social medicine groups have focused on the social determinants of illness and early death, the effects of social policies such as privatisation and public sector cutbacks, occupational and environmental causes of illness, critical epidemiology, mental health effects of political trauma, the impact of gender, and collaborations with local communities, labour organisations, and indigenous people. The groups' achievements and financial survival have varied, depending partly on the national context. Active professional associations have developed, both nationally and internationally. Several groups have achieved publication in journals and books, despite financial and technical difficulties that might be lessened through a new initiative sponsored by the US National Library of Medicine. The conceptual orientation and research efforts of these groups have tended to challenge current relations of economic and political power. Despite its dangers, Latin American social medicine has emerged as a productive field of work, whose findings have become pertinent throughout the world.


Asunto(s)
Política , Salud Pública/tendencias , Medicina Social/organización & administración , Anciano , Humanos , América Latina , Masculino , América del Sur
6.
Soc Sci Med ; 52(8): 1243-53, 2001 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11281407

RESUMEN

This article presents the results of the comparative research project, "Managed Care in Latin America: Its Role in Health System Reform." Conducted by teams in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, and the United States, the study focused on the exportation of managed care, especially from the United States, and its adoption in Latin American countries. Our research methods included qualitative and quantitative techniques. The adoption of managed care reflects the process of transnationalization in the health sector. Our findings demonstrate the entrance of the main multinational corporations of finance capital into the private sector of insurance and health services, and these corporations' intention to assume administrative responsibilities for state institutions and to secure access to medical social security funds. International lending agencies, especially the World Bank, support the corporatization and privatization of health care services, as a condition of further loans to Latin American countries. We conclude that this process of change, which involves the gradual adoption of managed care as an officially favored policy, reflects ideologically based discourses that accept the inexorable nature of managed care reforms.


Asunto(s)
Difusión de Innovaciones , Política de Salud/tendencias , Competencia Dirigida , Organización de la Financiación , Reforma de la Atención de Salud , Instituciones Privadas de Salud , Sistemas Prepagos de Salud , Humanos , América Latina , Privatización , Salud Pública
7.
Cad Saude Publica ; 16(1): 95-105, 2000.
Artículo en Español | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10738154

RESUMEN

This article presents the results of the comparative research project "Managed Care in Latin America: Its Role in Health Reform". The project was conducted by teams in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, and the United States. The study's objective was to analyze the process by which managed care is exported, especially from the United States, and how managed care is adopted in Latin American countries. Our research methods included qualitative and quantitative techniques. Adoption of managed care reflects transnationalization of the health sector. Our findings demonstrate the entrance of large multinational financial capital into the private insurance and health services sectors and their intention of participating in the administration of government institutions and medical/social security funds. We conclude that this basic change involving the slow adoption of managed care is facilitated by ideological changes with discourses accepting the inexorable nature of public sector reform.


Asunto(s)
Reforma de la Atención de Salud/economía , Programas Controlados de Atención en Salud/organización & administración , Financiación del Capital , Cooperación Internacional , Programas Controlados de Atención en Salud/economía , Comercialización de los Servicios de Salud , América del Sur , Estados Unidos
10.
Rev Panam Salud Publica ; 1(4): 315-23, 1997 Apr.
Artículo en Español | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9303814

RESUMEN

The governmental and health sector reforms that are being carried out in the countries of the Region demand the rapid training of health personnel to face the challenges posed by the process of change. This report explores the many possibilities of the Internet to serve as a mode of communication and updating of health professionals and technicians and as a vehicle for the dissemination of information on subjects of interest to scientists and researchers.


Asunto(s)
Redes de Comunicación de Computadores , Salud , Servicios de Información , Países en Desarrollo , América Latina
11.
Cad Saude Publica ; 10(4): 491-6, 1994 Dec.
Artículo en Español | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14676935

RESUMEN

This work analyzes the sanitary question in the modernity-postmodernity debate. Such analyses are performed form a philosophical position that states the crisis of Modernity and questions the ideological twist that to itself propitiates postmodernity, shutting out questioning views or visions. It propitiates an alternative view of politics, thinking of it from the potency plane and giving a role to the subject in the decision of producing transformations.

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