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Other Program Locations

Brazil

Established: 1991
Workshops: 47 (including follow-up workshops)
Follow-up Workshops:
2
Projects:
Over 904

PSBH Workshops: 38 (including follow-up workshops, since 2001)
PSBH Follow-up Workshops:
PSBH Workshop Participants: 798
PSBH Projects: Over 800

PSBHI Workshops: 9
PSBHI Follow-up Workshops: 2
PSBHI Workshop Participants: 104
PSBHI Projects: 104

Contact Information:
National Coordinator - PSBH
Daniel Becker
Tel & Fax: (55-21) 38520080
Email: danielb@cedaps.org.br

Web Site: www.cedaps.org.br

Report of "Best Practices" in Latin America (Portuguese and Spanish)

The Problem Solving for Better Health® (PSBH®) program in Brazil, or Construcao Compartilhada de Solucoes em Saude (Shared Solutions in Health), is coordinated by the Centro de Promocao da Saude (Center for Health Promotion, CEDAPS). The mission of CEDAPS is to improve the health status and the quality of life of Brazil’s population, with a focus on its impoverished sectors. Its main strategies are the development and implementation of better health care models and appropriate technology in primary health care; health promotion, prevention, education, and communication programs; professional training and qualification; and integrated sustainable development programs. The organization actively collaborates with the Ministry of Health and the Municipal Health Secretariat of Rio de Janeiro, and has created partnerships for the PSBH program from various state agencies, universities, and other NGOs. CEDAPS has replicated the process in Santos, Sao Paulo, and the Amazon, always focusing on the low-income communities at those locations.

The main goal of the program is to empower professionals and community leaders, helping them to develop and implement interventions that will solve broad health problems affecting their institutions and communities. PSBH methodology promotes the better use of available resources, innovation, individual responsibility, and collaborative networking.

Over 1,000 projects have been developed, many of them effectively impacting relevant health and social problems. The projects are benefiting approximately 200,000 people in Brazil, the large majority of them residents of impoverished communities. CEDAPS follows up on every project, providing technical support, networking, seed funding (in some cases), and evaluation.

The Problem Solving for Better Health Initiative™ (PSBHI™) program is coordinated in conjunction with the Center for Health Promotion (CEDAPS). The first area to benefit was Santa Cruz, a region in Rio de Janeiro with severe poverty, violence, and ill health. Activists from various government, private, and community sectors were brought together to work collaboratively on an intersectoral approach called The Santa Cruz Initiative.

During the next year, they discussed priority issues and chose to focus on youth and childhood at risk, education, community organization and environment, access to the work market, and women’s health. In August 2000, 90 selected participants gathered at a workshop with several international guests and observers; including DHF’s director and representatives from five countries, PAHO/WHO, the Berkeley School of Public Health, the Healthy Cities Coalition, and two Brazilian public health schools. Forty-seven projects were developed.

This first wave of the Initiative impacted the lives of at least 15,000 people in the region. The follow-up phase focused on the support, networking, and cooperation for projects; feedback and dissemination; involvement of the private sector; and evaluation of impact. New problems were analyzed and new projects implemented.

Sustainability strategies include the strengthening of the local committee, absorption of programs by public services and private institutions, and the continuous mobilization of the community. A community inside Santa Cruz called Favela do Aco, the poorest area of the region with the most severe problems, was chosen as the site of the second PSBHI program.



 


Country:
Brazil
City: Rio de Janeiro

Health and Social Areas Addressed:

Communicable/Infectious Diseases:
Gastrointestinal Diseases
HIV/AIDS
Malaria
Parasitic Diseases
Sexually Transmitted
Diseases (STDs/STIs)
Skin Diseases
Tuberculosis
Other Communicable Diseases
Demographic Groups:
Adolescents/Teen Health
Children's Health
Elder Health
Men's Health
Women's Health
Economic Issues:
Employment/Job
Skills/Training
Income Generation
Occupational Health/Work Safety
Resources (human, equipment, funding)
Transportation (V- Economic)
Other Economic Issues
Environmental Health:
Air Pollution
Animal/Insect/Pest Control
Waste Management
Water Supply/Quality
Other Environmental Issues
Health Care & Policy Issues:
Access to Health Facilities/Services
Aging/Elder Care
Bioethics
Children's Health/Child Care
Clinics/Clinic Administration
Curative Medicine/Surgery
Health Care Workers
Health Equality/Inequality
Health Promotion/Lifestyles
Hospitals/Hospital Administration
Injury/Trauma/Safety
Nurses (including students)
Physicians (including students)
&Other Health Care & Policy Issues
Health Promotion/Lifestyles:
Dental/Oral Health
Diet/Exercise/Fitness
Hygiene
Nutrition/Malnutrition
Obesity
Smoking
Substance Abuse
Vaccination
Vitamin Intake
Other Health Promotion/Lifestyle Issues
Mental Health:
Psychological/Psychiatric Disorders
Stress
Thought, Mood & Behavior Disorders
Other Mental Health Issues
Noncommunicable Diseases:
Allergies
Cancer
Cardiovascular Disorders
Diabetes
Endocrine Disorders
Foot Disorders/Foot Care
Gastrointestinal Disorders
Genitourinary Disorders
Musculoskeletal Disorders
Neurological Disorders
Respiratory Disorders
Skin Disorders
Other Noncommunicable Diseases
Nutrition:
Dietary Habits
Food Safety
Health Promotion/Lifestyles
Obesity
Other Nutrition Issues
Sensory Function:
Hearing
Nasal Function
Vision
Other Sensory Function Issues
Social Issues/Services:
Community Organization
Crime
Cultural Beliefs/Perceptions
Domestic Abuse/Violence
Education/Skill Building
Family Structure/Function
Interpersonal Relationships
Politics
Quality of Life Issues
Religious Beliefs/Customs
Other Social Issues
Women's Health/Reproductive Health:
Family Planning
Teenage Pregnancy
Prenatal/Postnatal Care
Other Reproductive Health Issues

 

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