| Literature DB >> 36011675 |
Walter Leal Filho1,2, João Henrique Paulino Pires Eustachio1,3, Alberto Paucar-Caceres4, Melissa Franchini Cavalcanti-Bandos5, Cintia Nunes1, Carlos Vílchez-Román6, Silvia Quispe-Prieto7, Luciana Londero Brandli8.
Abstract
Brazil is Latin America's largest country and has a strong economy, but it is also characterised by many inequalities. These are very conspicuous in the health sector, particularly in health education, which is expected to modernise according to the planetary health (PH) perspective. This paper describes the health education scenario in Brazil and undertakes an analysis of the postgraduate health programmes and policies in place, identifying the extent to which these support the cause of PH. To achieve this goal, this paper deploys a bibliometric analysis to gain a better understanding of the research streams related to higher education and PH. In addition, it presents and discusses selected case studies in the field and cross-checks documents from the Brazilian Ministry of Education against five domains of PH in education. The results indicate that despite some progress to date and the fact that some programmes are in place, there is a perceived need for policies and efforts from education organisations towards connecting PH principles in the education of current and future health professionals.Entities:
Keywords: Brazil; bibliometric analysis; health education; higher education; planetary health
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36011675 PMCID: PMC9407755 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191610041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Health sciences and multidisciplinary programmes. Source: CAPES [12].
Figure 2Research setting [10].
Search string and number of documents.
| Database | Search String | Number of Documents |
|---|---|---|
| Web of Science | TS = ((“Planetary Health”) AND (“academi*” OR “universit*” OR “higher education institution*” OR “HEI*” OR “higher education” OR “education”)) | 110 |
| Scopus | TITLE-ABS-KEY((“Planetary Health”) AND (“academi*” OR “universit*” OR “higher education institut*” OR “HEI*” OR “higher education” OR “education”)) | 136 |
Figure 3Co-occurrence analysis of PH and terms related to HEIs. Note: Co-occurrence of the terms—VOSviewer output.
Assessment of PH domains in health education in Brazil.
| The Planetary Education Framework [ | Evidence in the Brazilian Health Education | Key Concepts and Areas of Study | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interconnection Within Nature | Cultural Diversity and Social Inclusion | Human Rights | These courses have in common the aim to work with one or more of these study areas or concepts: traditional knowledge systems; nature connectedness (human–nature connectedness); ecological identity; epistemological diversity and humility; worldviews, from Animism to Cartesianism; two-eyed seeing; kincentric; resilience; and Pachamama, Gaia, and other similar concepts. |
| The Anthropocene and Health | Health and Environment (5 programmes) | Society, Environment and Quality of Life | These courses have in common the aim to work with one or more of these study areas or concepts: the social and environmental determinants of health, the Anthropocene and related concepts, Anthropocentric and ecocentric, globalisation, demographic transition, epidemiological transition, planetary boundaries, and ecological footprint. |
| Systems Thinking and Complexity | Professional Health Education (2 programmes) | Decision and Health Models | These courses have in common a focus on one or more of these study areas or concepts: epistemological diversity and humility; transdisciplinarity; uncertainty; implicit/explicit bias and self-awareness; unintended/unexpected consequences; and scale, including geographical scale (local/regional/global—micro/meso/macro) and temporal scale (past/present/future—top priority/low priority—urgent/elective). |
| Equity and Social Justice | Preservation and Management of The Cultural Heritage of Sciences and Health | Ethnic and Racial Relations | These courses have in common a focus on one or more of these study areas or concepts: accessibility; equity and inequity; social, distributive, intergenerational and multispecies justice; the rights of nature; cultural humility; empathy; privilege; and racism and oppression. |
| Movement Building and Systems Change | Community Development | Environment and Rural Development | These courses have in common the aim to work with one or more of these study areas or concepts: urgency and hope; strategic visioning; theory of change; the spectrum of allies; advocacy; entrepreneurship; innovation; empowerment, autonomy and agency; collaboration—participation; inclusivity/diversity; capacity building; and resilience. |