Lay agency and the generation of public-private mix health care maps
Cien Saude Colet. 2017 Jun;22(6):2013-2024.
doi: 10.1590/1413-81232017226.14822016.
[Article in
Portuguese,
English]
Authors
Consuelo Sampaio Meneses
1
, Luiz Carlos de Oliveira Cecilio
1
, Rosemarie Andreazza
1
, Graça Carapinheiro
2
, Maria da Graça Garcia Andrade
3
, Sílvia Maria Santiago
3
, Eliane Cardoso Araújo
1
, Ana Lúcia Medeiros Souza
1
, Denizi Oliveira Reis
1
, Nicanor Rodrigues da Silva Pinto
1
, Sandra Maria Spedo
1
Affiliations
- 1 Departamento de Medicina Preventiva, Universidade Federal de São Paulo. R. Botucatu 740, Vila Clementino. 04023-062 São Paulo SP Brasil. consuelosampaiomeneses@gmail.com.
- 2 Instituto Superior de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa, Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. Lisboa Portugal.
- 3 Departamento de Saúde Coletiva, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Campinas SP Brasil.
Abstract
This paper discusses part of the results obtained from a study carried out in two cities of the so-called ABCD Paulista Region in the period 2010-2012, in an attempt to spot the existence of non-state regulatory rationale towards access and consumption of health care services. The first stage includes interviews carried out with strategic stakeholders (managers and politicians) and key workers players. The second stage collected the stories of 18 very frequent users of health care services. This study revealed the leading role played by users to produce "health care maps", with emphasis on the frequent use of public and private resources in their itineraries, circumventing or merging with government regulation to obtain the care they need. The different formats of public-private mix transcend the still prevailing "official" concepts about the clear distinction between the two systems, which reveals the importance of this theme to public health management.
MeSH terms
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Brazil
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Cities
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Delivery of Health Care / organization & administration*
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Health Policy*
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Health Services / statistics & numerical data
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Health Services Accessibility
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Humans
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Interviews as Topic
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National Health Programs / organization & administration
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Private Sector*
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Public Health
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Public Sector*