scholarly journals O pensamento econômico em saúde de Hésio Cordeiro sobre o financiamento da saúde pública no Brasil e a intervenção anticíclica em Claudio Napoleoni

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-122
Author(s):  
Leonardo Carnut ◽  
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Glauce Araújo Taborda Teixeira ◽  
Gabriela Araújo Valencia ◽  
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...  

This paper introduces a theoretical reflection about the problem of health financing from the perspective of Hésio Cordeiro, one of the most important sanitarians of the 1980s in Brazil, and how this author was influenced by the work of Claudio Napoleoni. For this purpose, the essay was used as textual unit and content analysis was incorporated as methodology. The content is structured in three parts. The first describes a brief intellectual and political-institutional biography of Cordeiro and Napoleoni, trying to situate both authors in their historical contexts. The second part shows how Cordeiro was inspired by Napoleoni’s work, which influenced the way Cordeiro addressed countercyclical solutions to rethink public health issues during the 1980s. The third points to a brief final consideration on the importance of Cordeiro as an intellectual who proposed progressist solutions for health back in his time.

2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irmo Marini ◽  
Madhuri V. Bhakta ◽  
Noreen Graf

A content analysis was conducted of letters to the editor of two physical disability-related magazines: New Mobility and Paraplegia News. Over 160 letters to the editor published from February 2001 through March 2007 were reviewed. Results indicated that despite the over 18 year old Americans with Disabilities Act, the most frequently categorized issue addressed in the letters pertained to accessibility. Adaptive aid equipment was the second most frequently cited issue, with contributors inquiring or providing information regarding low- and high-end cost adaptive aids/assistive technology. The third most frequent concern was health issues, with letter writers inquiring or providing information about treating secondary conditions for persons with physical disabilities. The implications for these and other related concerns for persons with physical disabilities are explored. Recommendations to rehabilitation counselors for engaging in advocacy efforts are provided.


Religions ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 784
Author(s):  
Anna Piela ◽  
Joanna Krotofil

Public health guidelines implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic have changed the way many people practice religion. In the realm of Islam, practices from the margins—attending online mosques and prayer groups, or praying alone—suddenly became commonplace. This paper addresses the question: What religious processes have become more evident among pluralist Muslim women during the pandemic? Based on 34 open-ended online surveys completed by pluralist Muslim women living chiefly in the USA and the UK, our analysis evidences the existence of four narratives that reflect fluctuations in the intensity and type of religious practice. The first and most prominent narrative in our dataset conveys enthusiastic embrace of social-distanced practices; the second describes a profound sense of aberration impossible to overcome in spiritual ways. The third highlights that for some Muslims, the pandemic brought no changes, as they continued to be isolated from their communities. The fourth is focused on an affirmation of a “remote” sociality experienced online. While some respondents acknowledge the increased individuation in their religious practice, they also find fulfilment in collective, if transformed, sociality. The changes in social interaction have led to a re-evaluation of salient aspects of their religious identity or, alternatively, highlighted longstanding modalities of exclusion.


Author(s):  
Simon Chapman

Many public health interventions are controversial or potentially controversial. The way the media handle such issues can strongly influence public and policy maker attitudes towards them and effective media advocacy can be a powerful way of taking forward public health initiatives. After reading this chapter you should have a better understanding of how the media deal with public health issues, how the way in which an issue is framed influences whether and how it leads to changes in policy, and what you can do when a public health issue is framed in an adverse or harmful way.


Wielogłos ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 137-159
Author(s):  
Adam Woźniak

Socrates, Meursault, and The Brothers Karamazov: The Court Trial as a Philosophical Medium The aim of this study is to characterise the way that literary accounts of court trials shape the space for philosophical considerations. In the first part of the text, Marshall McLuhan’s concept of the medium is introduced and interpreted within the context of Martin Heidegger’s notion of technology. The second part of the paper, meanwhile, concerns the opposition between language and reality, which is crucial for the philosophical implications of courtroom space. This study includes also the “law and literature” perspective. The theoretical reflection is based on an analysis of The Stranger by Albert Camus, The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky, and Plato’s The Apology. Finally, the third part deals with the literary composition of the court trial account.


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