ANA CAROLINA BASSO SCHMITT

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
7
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Fisioterapia, Fonoaudiologia e Terapia Ocupacional, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
LIM/54 - Laboratório de Bacteriologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 3 de 3
  • article
    O acesso e o fazer da reabilitação na Atenção Primária à Saúde
    (2017) RODES, Carolina Hart; KUREBAYASHI, Renato; KONDO, Vivian Emy; LUFT, Vinícios Dornelles; GÓES, Ângela Baroni de; SCHMITT, Ana Carolina Basso
    ABSTRACT For adequate rehabilitation service offer in Brazil, it is necessary to understand the availability of access to Rede Assistencial de Saúde (RAS) [Brazilian Health Care Network (HCN)] and develop practices to meet health needs. The objective was to estimate the distribution trend of rehabilitation human resources in HCN between 2007 and 2015, especially in Primary Health Care (PHC) and get to know the practice of Clínica Ampliada (CA) [Extended Clinical Care (ECC)], Projeto Terapêutico Singular (PTS) [Singular Therapeutic Project (STP)], and Apoio Matricial (AM) [Matrix Support (MS)] of speech therapists, physical therapist, and occupational therapists. We searched for professionals from the Health Care Network using Cadastro Nacional de Estabelecimentos de Saúde (CNES) [Brazilian National Register of Health Establishments (NRHE)], and the monthly trend was elaborated through Prais-Winsten linear regression models. Aiming at knowing the practices of ECC, STP, and MS, “Discourses of the Collective Subject” were made from interviews held with 12 professionals. Medium complexity services had higher concentration of professionals, except for the hospitals in São Paulo city, and PHC had the lower possibility of access. Though shy, healthcare increased for all three professionals, with emphasis on physical therapists in hospitals in São Paulo city, in a comparison between the state (0.73%) and city (0.95%). In PHC, the highest raises were for occupational therapists of São Paulo city and physical therapists in Brazil. For MS, ECC and STP, besides the difficulty of the working process itself, ideas such as “plurality of concepts,” “biopsychosocial perspective,” and “possibility of adaptation” of care were predominant. Despite the growing numbers, the availability of professionals is still low and uneven, concentrated in specialty, and emphasising the expansion of physical therapy in hospitals and occupational therapy in PHC.
  • article
    Overview of physical therapy graduation courses in Brazil: current scenario
    (2017) GÓES, Angela Baroni de; ARAÚJO, Francisca Rêgo Oliveira de; MARQUES, Amélia Pasqual; SCHMITT, Ana Carolina Basso
    Abstract Introduction: After the regulation of Physical Therapy (PT) in 1969, there were only six undergraduate courses in Brazil. In the 90s, higher education underwent major expansion in all professions and the same occurred to PT, with consequent increase in the number of professionals in the labor market and privatization of education. Objective: To describe the current situation of PT courses in Brazil offered by Higher Education Institutions (IES). Methods: The data for the region, academic organization, situation, period, school system, administrative category, vacancies, course hours and duration were obtained from the website of the Ministry of Education (MEC) and refer to the year of 2013. The descriptive analyzes of central tendency, dispersion and percentage were performed in Stata 9®. Results: From the total of 550 IES registered in the MEC, 281 (51%) were in the Southeast. Regarding the academic organization, 341 (62%) corresponded to universities and 483 (87.9%) of the IES were private. Of the courses, 521 (94.7%) are active, the predominant school system was the semiannual (91.5%) and 438 were part-time. The average vacancies authorized by the IES were 129 ± 102, with at least 44,900 vacancies available in the country. Of the courses, 75% had 4,000 hours of duration with the minimum of seven semesters and a maximum of fourteen. Conclusion: The data show a higher offer of PT courses in the private sector compared to the public. There was a progressive concentration of courses and vacancies in the Southeast, especially in São Paulo.
  • article 17 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Posture Alignment of Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis: Photogrammetry in Scoliosis School Screening
    (2017) PENHA, Patricia Jundi; PENHA, Narima Livia Jundi; KELLY, Barbarah; CARVALHO, Goncalves De; ANDRADE, Rodrigo Mantelatto; SCHMITT, Ana Carolina Basso; JOAO, Silvia Maria Amado
    Objective: The objective of this study was to describe the posture patterns of adolescents diagnosed with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) in a scoliosis school screening (SSS). Methods: Two-dimensional photogrammetry was used to assess the posture of 37 adolescents diagnosed with scoliosis (scoliosis group, SG) (Cobb angle >= 10 degrees) and 76 adolescents with a false positive diagnosis (false positive group, FPG) (Cobb angle <10 degrees, angle of trunk rotation >= 7 degrees). In total, 2562 10-to 14-year-old adolescents were enrolled in the SSS, which was performed in public schools in the cities of Amparo, Pedreira, and Mogi Mirimin the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil. Their posture was analyzed using Postural Analysis Software. Continuous variables were tested using Student t test, and categorical variableswere tested using a chi(2) test. The SG, FPG, simple curve group, and double curve groupwere all compared. Bivariate analysis was used to identify associations between postural deviations and scoliosis. The adopted significance level was alpha = .05. Results: The SG (2.7 +/- 1.9 degrees) had greater shoulder obliquity than the FPG (1.9 +/- 1.4 degrees) (P = .010), and this deviation was associated with scoliosis (odds ratio [95% CI] P = 1.4 [1.1-1.8] 0.011). The SG had asymmetry between the right-and left-side lower limb frontal angle, shoulder sagittal alignment, and knee angle. The double curve group (3 +/- 1.7 degrees) presented a greater value of the vertical alignment of the torso than the simple curve group did (1.9 +/- 1 degrees; P = .032). Conclusions: Adolescents diagnosed with AIS in an SSS had greater shoulder obliquity and asymmetry between the right and left sides. Shoulder obliquity was the only postural deviation associated with AIS.