The Brazilian health system is mixed: public and private. There is a public system - SUS
and the system of supplementary health (health insurance companies). The SUS was very well
designed and implemented for about 25 years (1988). ANS - National Agency of Supplemental
Health is even younger, created in January 2000. ANS is the regulatory agency under the
Ministry of Health. The two systems coexist, but do not interact properly.A hundred and fifty million people depend exclusively on SUS and health operators have
about 52 million users. Several of these users also use SUS on health demands and, in
different ways, all Brazilians use SUS (health surveillance, for example).Public health funding has not been sufficient to meet the demands of the people. The share
of spending occurs in three levels, but there is a progressive exemption from federal
portion, sacrificing increasingly the federative states and especially the municipal
budget. About 12 years the share of federal spending on health was around 60% of the whole.
Today only 42%, as around 58% come from states and municipalities. Municipalities must
apply at least 12% and states at least 15% of its budget on public health. The
supplementary system, which serves about 25% of the population, has more resources than the
public system.While we recognize improvements in the public health system, its management is not
qualified, because there is predominant political and electoral bias in the choice of the
managers; instead of this, we should expect to have strong technical influence. Also, is
not used adequately the largest and most qualified efficiency of the supplemental health
care sector. Besides not having enough resources, they are badly applied and associated to
the rampant corruption that persists in our country, that has good, orderly and worker
people.We believe that public-private partnerships and effective prioritization of the health
sector could bring more gains to the system, directly benefiting the population, especially
the poor and needy, already suffering a lot due to poverty, delays in education,
infrastructure and safety.Not only suffers the health care, but also teaching and research. The assistance should
prioritize access to quality, ensuring the two main entry points to the system: primary or
basic and emergency care. An integrated network should exist, with permanent control and
evaluation, with referral and counter-referral of patients using SUS.The teaching in the sector has been less than optimal. Several medical schools were opened,
in the majority as private schools and without conditions for functioning: good physical
structure for practical activities, as well as current curriculum for Brazilian medical
needs and qualified teachers. The federal government claims that our medical schools train
few students each year, and insists to authorize new vacancies, 40-50 every year. We need
to better educate our doctors and other healthcare professionals. The same happens in
post-graduate level where it is also prioritized the quantity, over quality. Let us form
the required amount with proper qualifications; it is possible and is the best way.The residency, which has been the gold standard for care, has suffered from misplaced
interventions with high dictatorial meddling. There is no planning for the number of health
professionals (doctors, nurses, dentists, physiotherapists etc.) for today or for the next
10, 20 or 30 years. We continue improvising, wanting to import models from other countries,
making use of them with patterns that are not adequate to our reality. Why the government
managers say they want in Brazil 2.7 physicians per 1,000 population? To be equal to the
UK? Well, today we have several cities that outperform this index: Brasília, Rio de
Janeiro, São Paulo and others; even there, the public system keep on being chaotic -
analyzed by the offered quality. The waiting list of patients for consultations,
complementary exams and surgical procedures is enormous. Several of these patients rely
upon themselves in emergencies, overloading them and many die from preventable causes.Clinical research in Brazil, the world's seventh largest economy, also shames us when
compared to many countries. There stubborn bureaucracy and overlapping of powers, among
many inefficiencies, greatly delays the analysis of several studies. We are behind in
clinical research from the point we are able to be. All of us lose: patients, researchers
and our country Brazil. Some patients fail to participate in studies that can mean gains in
quality of life and even cure. Our researchers lose several opportunities, especially
studies in phase I and II. At the end, Brazil loses because the gain is undeniable;
research leads to the development, create wealth and currencies.However, if much can and must be done, and if we realize that the people in charge cannot
do, we should use our democratic power to change this sad scenario. Brazil is much more
than any of us, any political party. The health is our greatest duty and the Brazilian
population deserves respect!