| Literature DB >> 34249829 |
Victor Bastos1,2, Roberta Mota1,2, Mylenna Guimarães2, Yuri Richard1, André Luis Lima3, Alexandre Casseb3, Gyovanna Corrêa Barata4, Jorge Andrade5, Livia Medeiros Neves Casseb2.
Abstract
Brazil has been promoting essential improvements in health indicators by implementing free-access health programs, which successfully reduced the prevalence of neglected zoonosis in urban areas, such as rabies. Despite constant efforts from the authorities to monitor and control the disease, sylvatic rabies is a current issue in Amazon's communities. The inequalities among Amazon areas challenge the expansion of high-tech services and limit the implementation of active laboratory surveillance to effectively avoid outbreaks in human and non-human hosts, which also reproduces a panorama of vulnerability in risk communities. Because rabies is a preventable disease, the prevalence in the particular context of the Amazon area highlights the failure of surveillance strategies to predict spillovers and indicates the need to adapt the public policies to a "One Health" approach. Therefore, this work assesses the distribution of free care resources and facilities among Pará's regions in the oriental Amazon; and discusses the challenges of implanting One Health in the particular context of the territory. We indicate a much-needed strengthening of the sylvatic and urban surveillance networks to achieve the "Zero by 30" goal, which is inextricable from multilateral efforts to combat the progressive biome's degradation.Entities:
Keywords: Amazon; One Health; equity; human rabies; universality
Year: 2021 PMID: 34249829 PMCID: PMC8267869 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.624574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1The levels of health care in the context of Brazil's system. The organizational health system's model follows the WHO's recommendations to divide levels of assistance according to health units' resources available to meet the patient's demands. The primary level works in a preventable approach by promoting close contact with the community. It may also offer free access to vaccines and medicine. The second level comprises hospitals and care centers that provide ambulatorial assistance to solve the main health problems. The third level offers high-cost and high-specialized treatments for the patient's rehabilitation, including Intensive Care Units and oncologic treatment.
Figure 2Pará's administrative division (SESPA). The regionalization of care resources is a national effort to reduce health inequities among Brazil's regions. In the Pará state, there are 13 health regions, which comprise the 144 municipalities of the area, considering their geographical characteristics.
The distribution of primary health units among Pará's regions.
| Araguaia | 194 | 3.42/104 people | 566,682 |
| Baixo Amazonas | 252 | 3.26/104 people | 771,715 |
| Carajás | 204 | 2.33/104 people | 875,232 |
| Lago de Tucuruí | 116 | 2.51/104 people | 461,593 |
| Metropolitana I | 205 | 0.91/104 people | 2,238,680 |
| Metropolitana II | 142 | 3.86/104 people | 367,592 |
| Metropolitana III | 375 | 3.99/104 people | 939,421 |
| Rio Caetés | 231 | 4.26/104 people | 541,251 |
| Tapajós | 97 | 4.38/104 people | 221,135 |
| Tocantins | 193 | 2.73/104 people | 705,089 |
| Xingú | 134 | 3.82/104 people | 350,276 |
| Marajó I | 105 | 4.30/104 people | 244,027 |
| Marajó II | 115 | 3.59/104 people | 320,172 |
The analysis on the mean coverage of services from the Primary Health Care (PHC) indicates a homogeneous distribution among the areas. It considered data on the availability of Family Health Support Center (CASF), primary health units, health center, home care, indigenous health care units, and fluvial mobile units.
Figure 3The availability of free medical resources and facilities. (A) human rabies vaccine's distribution per 10,000 people is heterogeneous and limited in some areas of the state. (B) the coverage of hospitals from medium and high-technological resources is concentrated in a few areas of the territory, and almost absent in neglected communities.
Figure 4Reports on animal bite and PEP administration in the Pará state during 2018 and 2019. (A) the offer of rabies vaccines may be insufficient to assist the PEP demand in some neglected areas of the state **(p < 0.01). (B) the reports on patients seeking care after a sylvatic or domestic animal bite indicate the high rate of interruption in the PEP **(p < 0.01).
Figure 5Human rabies epidemiology in northern Brazil (2000–2018). It was reported 160 fatal cases in the period, with bat-transmitted outbreaks. Pará state has a central role in the northern region, representing 81% of the total confirmed cases.