Navegando por Palavras-chave "Práticas de saúde"
Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
Resultados por página
Opções de Ordenação
- ItemAcesso aberto (Open Access)O Atendimento de emergência a corpos feridos por atos violentos(IMS-UERJ, 2005-06-01) Sarti, Cynthia Andersen [UNIFESP]; Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP)The underlying question in this article relates to the limits and possibilities of care for victims of violence as provided by health services, specifically by emergency departments. The initial problem is that specialized care for these cases requires interdisciplinary and multi-professional action, distinct from that proposed during the biomedical training of health professionals as a whole and especially physicians and nurses. Beginning with an ethnographic study of a public emergency hospital in the city of São Paulo, the article then seeks to analyze the concepts of body and violence adopted by these professionals, underlying their care for bodies injured by violent acts, within the characteristics of these services. The focus is on concepts and practices in a healthcare context characterized by the displacement of subjectivity both in patients and health professionals, illustrated by emergency services, with a discussion on the implications for treatment of victims of violence.
- ItemAcesso aberto (Open Access)Nem doente, nem vítima: o atendimento às lesões autoprovocadas nas emergências(ABRASCO - Associação Brasileira de Saúde Coletiva, 2009-12-01) Machin, Rosana [UNIFESP]; Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP)This paper shows concepts and practices of health professionals regarding cases of self-injury. It is problematized the existent gap between professionals training based in the biomedical model and practices, in which are presented dimension not considered for biomedicine. The empiric reference is a public emergency hospital in the city of São Paulo. The qualitative nature study was developed by observing attendances, consults to medical records and interviews with health professionals. The underlying question is related to intelligibility model of the illness, based in the body as a privileged locus of care, and illness as accidental event. Contradictively, self-injury situations (suicide attempts, drug and alcohol abuse) are analyzed as intentionally events, consequence of a choice, implicating no identification of their authors as patients or victims of care.