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1.
PLoS One ; 15(10): e0240631, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33057414

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Improving access and quality in health care is a pressing issue worldwide and pay for performance (P4P) strategies have emerged as an alternative to enhance structure, process and outcomes in health. In 2011, Brazil adopted its first P4P scheme at national level, the National Programme for Improving Primary Care Access and Quality (PMAQ). The contribution of PMAQ in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals related to maternal and childcare remains under investigated in Brazil. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the association of PMAQ with the provision of maternal and childcare in Brazil, controlling for socioeconomic, geographic and family health team characteristics. METHOD: We used cross-sectional quantile regression (QR) models for two periods, corresponding to 33,368 Family Health Teams (FHTs) in the first cycle and 39,211 FHTs in the second cycle of PMAQ. FHTs were analysed using data from the Brazilian Ministry of Health (SIAB and CNES) and the Brazilian Institute for Geography and Statistics (IBGE). RESULTS: The average number of antenatal consultations per month were positively associated with PMAQ participating teams, with larger effect in the lower tail (10th and 25th quantiles) of the conditional distribution of the response variable. There was a positive association between PMAQ and the average number of consultations under 2 years old per month in the 10th and 25th quantiles, but a negative association in the upper tail (75th and 90th quantiles). For the average number of physician consultations for children under 1 year old per month, PMAQ participating teams were positively associated with the response variable in the lower tail, but different from the previous models, there is no clear evidence that the second cycle gives larger coefficients compared with first cycle. CONCLUSION: PMAQ has contributed to increase the provision of care to pregnant women and children under 2 years at primary healthcare level. Teams with lower average number of antenatal or child consultations benefited the most by participating in PMAQ, which suggests that PMAQ might motivate worse performing health providers to catch up.


Subject(s)
Infant Care/organization & administration , National Health Programs/organization & administration , Prenatal Care/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Reimbursement, Incentive , Brazil , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Health Services Accessibility/organization & administration , Humans , Infant , Infant Care/economics , Infant, Newborn , National Health Programs/economics , Pregnancy , Prenatal Care/economics , Primary Health Care/economics , Program Evaluation , Quality of Health Care
2.
Rev Panam Salud Publica ; 44: e39, 2020.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32355501

ABSTRACT

In Brazil, the promotion, protection, and recovery of health are among the initiatives provided by the public and universal Unified Health System (SUS). The primary healthcare level (PHC), the preferred point of access to the system, plays the role of coordinating and ordinating health care services and actions in the network. In the context of PHC, feeding and nutrition efforts must be aligned with National Feeding and Nutrition Policy (PNAN) guidelines and may be supported by feeding and nutritional surveillance actions. Data from PHC information systems and population surveys show that excess weight affects more than half the adult population of Brazil, and that consumption of ultra-processed foods is on the rise. This scenario requires that health care teams be prepared to prioritize initiatives for users with chronic diseases, using risk stratification, stabilization of the disease, and enhancement of supported self-care with a focus on diet and physical activity. At the same time, considering the country's epidemiological profile, teams must carry out initiatives to fight undernutrition and prevent anemia and hypovitaminosis A to address the multiple burden of malnutrition. The present article describes the current scenario of feeding and nutrition initiatives implemented at the PHC level in Brazil via the SUS.


En Brasil, el Sistema Único de Salud (SUS), que es público y universal, ofrece medidas de promoción, protección y recuperación de la salud. La atención primaria de salud es la puerta preferida de acceso de la población al SUS, y su función es coordinar y ordenar las medidas y los servicios de salud disponibles en la red. En el ámbito de la atención primaria de salud, las medidas de alimentación y nutrición deben estar en consonancia con las directrices de la política nacional de alimentación y nutrición, y pueden potenciarse a partir de medidas de vigilancia alimentaria y nutricional. Los datos de los sistemas de información disponibles en todas las unidades básicas de salud y en encuestas poblacionales indican que más de la mitad de la población adulta en Brasil presenta exceso de peso y que ha aumentado el consumo de alimentos ultraprocesados. Esa situación exige que los equipos de salud se organicen con objeto de priorizar ciertas medidas para las personas con trastornos crónicos, según la estratificación del riesgo, la estabilización del trastorno y la potenciación del autocuidado apoyado, con enfoque en la alimentación y la actividad física. Al mismo tiempo, según el perfil epidemiológico, los equipos deben emprender actividades de lucha contra la desnutrición y de prevención de la anemia y de la carencia de vitamina A, teniendo en cuenta la múltiple carga de la malnutrición en el país. El objetivo del presente artículo es presentar el panorama actual de las medidas relativas a la alimentación y nutrición que se llevan a cabo en el ámbito de la atención primaria de salud en el SUS.

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