Water, land, and air: how do residents of Brazilian remote rural territories travel to access health services?

被引:5
|
作者
de Almeida, Patty Fidelis [1 ]
Dos Santos, Adriano Maia [2 ]
da Silva Cabral, Lucas Manoel [3 ]
Dos Anjos, Eduarda Ferreira [2 ]
Rodrigues Fausto, Marcia Cristina [4 ]
Bousquat, Aylene [5 ]
机构
[1] Fed Fluminense Univ, Collect Hlth Inst, Niteroi, RJ, Brazil
[2] Univ Fed Bahia, Multidisciplinary Hlth Inst, Vitoria Da Conquista, BA, Brazil
[3] Univ Estado Rio De Janeiro, Inst Social Med, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
[4] Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz, Natl Sch Publ Hlth Sergio Arouca, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
[5] Univ Sao Paulo, Publ Hlth Fac, Sao Paulo, Brazil
关键词
Transport; Health services accessibility; Public Health; Health disparities; Rural population; Brazil; TRANSPORTATION BARRIERS; UNITED-STATES; CARE; PEOPLE;
D O I
10.1186/s13690-022-00995-z
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background Ensuring adequate and safe means of travel is essential for maintaining and improving the health and well-being of residents of rural communities worldwide. This article maps costs, distances, travel times, and means of elective and urgent/emergency health transport in Brazilian remote rural municipalities. Methods Multiple case studies were conducted in 27 remote rural municipalities using a qualitative method. A total of 178 key informants (managers, doctors, and nurses) were interviewed. Secondary data from national information systems were analyzed for the socioeconomic characterization, to identify the costs, distances, and travel times. Through the thematic content analysis of the interviews, the means of transport, and strategies developed by managers, professionals and users for their provision were identified. Results The costs of traveling between remote rural municipalities and locations where most of specialized and hospital services are centered can compromise a significant part of the families' income. The insufficiency, restriction of days, times, and routes of health transport affects the selection of beneficiaries based on socioeconomic criteria in places of high vulnerability and less investment in road infrastructure. In remote rural municipalities, travelling to seek health care involves inter-municipal and intra-municipal flows, as their territories have dispersed populations. Several means of transport were identified - air, river, and land - which are often used in a complementary way in the same route. Some patients travel for more than 1000 km, with travel times exceeding 20 h, especially in the Amazon region. While the demands for urgent and emergency transport are partially met by national public policy, the same is not true for the elective transport of patients. The impossibility of providing health transport under the exclusive responsibility of the municipalities is identified. Conclusions For the remote rural municipalities populations, the absence of national public policies for sufficient, continuous, and timely provision of transport for health services worsens the cycle of inequities and compromises the assumption of the universal right to health care.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 46 条
  • [31] Training to reduce behavioral health disparities: How do we optimally prepare family medicine residents for practice in rural communities?
    Robohm, Jennifer S.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY IN MEDICINE, 2017, 52 (03): : 298 - 312
  • [32] Late presentation to HIV care despite good access to health services: current epidemiological trends and how to do better
    Darling, Katharine E. A.
    Hachfeld, Anna
    Cavassini, Matthias
    Kirk, Ole
    Furrer, Hansjakob
    Wandeler, Gilles
    [J]. SWISS MEDICAL WEEKLY, 2016, 146 : w14348
  • [33] Do exemptions from user fees mean free access to health services? A case study from a rural Cambodian hospital
    Jacobs, Bart
    Price, Neil Lewis
    Oeun, Sam
    [J]. TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 2007, 12 (11) : 1391 - 1401
  • [34] No longer ‘flying blind’: how access has changed emergency mental health care in rural and remote emergency departments, a qualitative study
    Emily Saurman
    Sue E Kirby
    David Lyle
    [J]. BMC Health Services Research, 15
  • [35] No longer 'flying blind': how access has changed emergency mental health care in rural and remote emergency departments, a qualitative study
    Saurman, Emily
    Kirby, Sue E.
    Lyle, David
    [J]. BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2015, 15
  • [36] Review of small rural health services in Victoria: how does the nursing-medical division of labour affect access to emergency care?
    Sullivan, Elise
    Francis, Karen
    Hegney, Desley
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2008, 17 (12) : 1543 - 1552
  • [37] Examination of the Cameroon DHS data to investigate how water access and sanitation services are related to diarrhea and nutrition among infants and toddlers in rural households
    Dharod, Jigna Morarji
    Nounkeu, Carole Debora
    Paynter, Lauren
    Labban, Jeffrey D.
    Sastre, Lauren R.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF WATER AND HEALTH, 2021, 19 (06) : 1030 - 1038
  • [38] Comparison of access to health services among urban-to-urban and rural-to-urban older migrants, and urban and rural older permanent residents in Zhejiang Province, China: a cross-sectional survey
    Ma, Sha
    Zhou, Xudong
    Jiang, Minmin
    Li, Qiuju
    Gao, Chao
    Cao, Weiming
    Li, Lu
    [J]. BMC GERIATRICS, 2018, 18
  • [39] Comparison of access to health services among urban-to-urban and rural-to-urban older migrants, and urban and rural older permanent residents in Zhejiang Province, China: a cross-sectional survey
    Sha Ma
    Xudong Zhou
    Minmin Jiang
    Qiuju Li
    Chao Gao
    Weiming Cao
    Lu Li
    [J]. BMC Geriatrics, 18
  • [40] How do nurses use early warning system vital signs observation charts in rural, remote and regional health care facilities: A scoping review
    Augutis, Wendy
    Flenady, Tracy
    Le Lagadec, Danielle
    Jefford, Elaine
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH, 2023, 31 (03) : 385 - 394