1 / 31

Health System and Medical Education in Brazil

Health System and Medical Education in Brazil. Milton A. Martins Professor of Medicine University of Sao Paulo Medical School. Overview. Something about Brazil Health System Physicians : number and distribution Medical Education Training of Specialists. Countries by Area (Km 2 ).

Download Presentation

Health System and Medical Education in Brazil

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Health System and Medical Education in Brazil Milton A. Martins Professor of Medicine University of Sao Paulo Medical School

  2. Overview • Something about Brazil • Health System • Physicians: number and distribution • Medical Education • Training of Specialists

  3. Countries by Area (Km2)

  4. Countries by Population

  5. Countries by Gross Domestic Product (millions of US dollars)

  6. But.... • Gross National Income per Capita • Brazil ranks 52nd (U$ 11,630) • And • Human Development Index (HDI) • Brazil ranks 79th

  7. Brazil

  8. Sao Paulo – Metropolitan Area • Total area – 8,500 Km2 • Urban area – 2,200 Km2 • 19,822,572 inhabitants (2011)

  9. Sao Paulo

  10. Brazil: Health Challenges of Developed and Developing World • Burden of diseases include • Aging of population • Chronic diseases (cardiovascular and cancer) • Urban violence and motor vehicle accidents • Infectious diseases, old and new • Mental health

  11. Brazil: Health Challenges of Developed and Developing World • We have very good public organ transplantation system, comprehensive care of people who live with HIV/AIDS and immunization coverage. • In contrast, we will not be able to reach the millennium development goal of reducing maternal mortality. • We have not been able to eradicate congenital syphilis and have a high prevalence of Hansen’s disease.

  12. Brazilian Health System (1988) • Since 1988, Brazil has developed a dynamic, complex health system (the Unified Health System, SUS), which is based on the principles of health as a citizen’s right and the state’s duty. • The SUS aims to provide comprehensive, universal preventive and curative care through decentralized management and provision of health services and promotes community participation at all administrative levels.

  13. Brazilian Health System (1988) • Implementation of SUS has been complicated by state support for the private sector, the concentration of health services in more developed regions, and chronic underfunding. • Brazil invests less than 4% of his gross national product in the public health system.

  14. Primary Care in Brazil • The expansion of primary care has been achieved mainly through the creation of the Program of Family Health (Programa de Saúde da Família – PSF) • PSF works through family health-care teams, which are generally composed of one doctor, one nurse, one auxiliary nurse and four to six community health workers, and, since 2004, oral health teams. Each team takes care of 600-1000 families. • There are about 33,000 family health care teams, reaching about 100 million people.

  15. Physicians/1000 populationWHO regions World Health Statistics 2013 (WHO)

  16. Physicians/1000 populationIncome Groups World Health Statistics 2013 (WHO)

  17. Brazil: Unequal Distribution of Physicians • Total number does not meet society’s needs • Regions of the country • Large and small cities • Central and peripheral areas of large cities • Public and private sectors of the health system

  18. Brazil: Unequal Distribution of Physicians(Physicians/1000 population)

  19. Medical Education in Brazil • Medical course in Brazil is a 6-year program, usually with two years of basic sciences, two years of clinical sciences and two years of clerkships (internship). • Professional education has not kept pace with the challenges of the health systems in the world. • This is the same in Brazil, although there has been a substantial effort to change education of health professions to meet the society needs.

  20. Medical Education Guidelines in Brazil • The guidelines for medical education established in 2001 define that medical schools must give a generalist formation and that the major determinant of the curricula in medical schools must be the health needs of the population and the training of medical students must be in all levels of the health system. • Almost all medical schools of Brazil developed programs to reorient their curricula to shift training from tertiary hospitals to clinics and communities.

  21. Medical Education Guidelines in Brazil • The new guidelines for medical education published this year by the Ministry of Education state that at least 30% of the last years of medical education (internship) must be composed of primary care and emergency care in the Brazilian Heath System (SUS).

  22. Increase in the Number of Medical Schools in Brazil • In the last years, there has been a substantial increase in the number of Medical Schools in Brazil, mainly of private schools. • Both the Brazilian Medical Association and the Brazilian Association of Medical Education oppose this increase. • We believe that there are enough Medical Schools in Brazil. • There are also concerns about the quality of many of these new Medical schools.

  23. Medical Schools in Brazil

  24. First Year Medical Students in Brazil

  25. Percentage of physicians that live in the state of Brazil where they went to Medical School (Seixas et al)

  26. Percentage of physicians that live in the state of Brazil where they went to Medical Residency (Seixas et al)

  27. Medical Residency in Brazil • Medical Residency is not mandatory to work as a physician in Brazil. • In the last years, there has been a substantial increase in the number of Medical Residency Programs in Brazil. • There are about 2,000 more graduates in Medical School than available positions for Residency. • According to a recently approved law (2013), there will be enough positions of Residency for all graduates from Medical School by 2019. • This increase will be mainly in Residency in Family Medicine (Family and Community Medicine in Brazil).

  28. Number of Positions Available for Graduates in Medical Schools

  29. Residency in Surgery in Brazil • Two years of General Surgery. • The majority of residents decide to go to a second Residency, in a subspecialty (Plastic Surgery, Urology, Vascular Surgery, Cardiac Surgery, Thoracic Surgery, Abdominal Surgery...)(2-3 more years). • Most surgeons believe that two years of training are not sufficient for a general surgeon. • There are a few programs of General Surgery of 4 years, in some Academic Health Centers.

  30. Thank you for your attention

More Related