quarta-feira, 16 de agosto de 2006

Jornal da Tarde (16/08) Estrangeiros no programa de aids

O Jornal da Tarde apresenta os dados de estrangeiros em tratamento para aids nos Instituto de Infectologia Emílio Ribas. Nos primeiros seis meses de 2006 foram detectados 47 estrangeiros provenientes de Portugal, Angola, Argentina, Paraguai e até da Suécia. No Centro de Referência DST/aids a situação é semelhante. Segundo os dirigentes, esse número é proporcionalmente pequeno perto do contingente de brasileiros atendidos. Esse fato permite muitas reflexões sobre (1) competência profissional da saúde pública brasileira; (2) globalização e relacionamento em futuros mercados comuns como o Mercosul e Alca; (3) reciprocidade de atendimento de brasileiros em outros países. Uma análise profunda da integração de mercados e assistência médica foi publicada por André Medici, Bernardo Weaver BarrosHealth Technical Note, 001/2006 – August 2006Inter-American Development Bank- Sustainable Development Department- Social Program Division – Washington DC USA ( http://www.iadb.org/sds/doc/HealthEconomicBlocks.pdf ) Na introdução extraiu-se: “….This paper analyzes the roles of health goods and services markets within the regional integration process. It is a known fact that the consolidation of integrated markets is slower regarding social goods and services (as health and education) than among other goods and services (e.g. durable and non-durable consumption goods). The paper discusses the nature of the health sector and its global dimension, showing the peculiar features of health goods and services marked by economic complexity and (according to Arrow) information asymmetry. Despite that, the paper emphasizes old and new reasons that place health as a pre-requisite to commercial integration. It approaches the role played by the State in health financing, provision and regulation and the commercial integration process. Moreover, it brings relevant concepts on the topic studied, like the factors that lead to regional public health financing, the concept of Regional Public Good and its use in the health sector, additionally to the concerns related with health care reciprocity among countries. Finally, it approaches health markets regional integration in the European Union, NAFTA, and MERCOSUR. …”

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Paulo Lotufo disse...

BMJ 19 08 2006
Rich nations are failing on universal access to antitretrovirals
Jocalyn Clark
Toronto
The world's richest nations are failing to ensure that people living with HIV/AIDS in the developing world have universal access to antiretroviral drugs, delegates at the 16th international AIDS conference in Toronto were told this week.