LILIA BLIMA SCHRAIBER

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
17
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Medicina Preventiva, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
LIM/39 - Laboratório de Processamento de Dados Biomédicos, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Líder

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 6 de 6
  • article 14 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    O campo da Saúde Coletiva no Brasil: definições e debates em sua constituição
    (2015) OSMO, Alan; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    At first sight, Collective Health might seem to be multiple and fragmented. Aiming to understand better what defines it as knowledge and activity in society, we made a theoretical review of historical and epistemological considerations developed by researchers who dedicated themselves to characterizing it as a scientific and social field. First, based on this literature, we provide a brief panorama of the emergence of Collective Health in Brazil. It is important to notice that its origins date back to the end of the 1970s, in a context in which Brazil was experiencing a military dictatorship. Collective Health emerges, at that moment, connected with the struggle for democracy and with the Health Reform movement. We show the influences of preventive medicine and social medicine in its constitution. Then, we explore different attempts to delimit it as field of knowledge and practice. We sought to present Collective Health not through one single definition, but taking into account the multiplicity of constructions about it that we found. This allows us to point to an identity of difficult development and that is still under construction.
  • article 33 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The Link Between Community-Based Violence and Intimate Partner Violence: the Effect of Crime and Male Aggression on Intimate Partner Violence Against Women
    (2015) KISS, Ligia; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; HOSSAIN, Mazeda; WATTS, Charlotte; ZIMMERMAN, Cathy
    Both intimate partner violence (IPV) and community violence are prevalent globally, and each is associated with serious health consequences. However, little is known about their potential links or the possible benefits of coordinated prevention strategies. Using aggregated data on community violence from the So Paulo State Security Department (INFOCRIM) merged with WHO multi-country study on women's health and domestic violence data, random intercept models were created to assess the effect of crime on women's probability of experiencing IPV. The association between IPV and male aggression (measured by women's reports of their partner's fights with other men) was examined using logistic regression models. We found little variation in the likelihood of male IPV perpetration related to neighborhood crime level but did find an increased likelihood of IPV experiences among women whose partners were involved in male-to-male violence. Emerging evidence on violence prevention has suggested some promising avenues for primary prevention that address common risk factors for both perpetration of IPV and male interpersonal violence. Strategies such as early identification and effective treatment of emotional disorders, alcohol abuse prevention and treatment, complex community-based interventions to change gender social norms and social marketing campaigns designed to modify social and cultural norms that support violence may work to prevent simultaneously male-on-male aggression and IPV. Future evaluations of these prevention strategies should simultaneously assess the impact of interventions on IPV and male interpersonal aggression.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    FEAR AND SHAME AS BARRIERS TO OVERCOME DOMESTIC VIOLENCE GENDER
    (2015) TERRA, Maria Fernanda; D'OLIVEIRA, Ana Flavia Pires Lucas; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    The objective is to understand - by means of the vulnerability concept - how the feelings of fear and shame associated with violent situations have an impact on the possibilities of women overcoming gender-based domestic violence. Although these feelings are considered a problem and are expressed according to each woman's personal viewpoint, this article argues that the relationship between them and gender-based domestic violence is not an individual problem; rather it is a social and cultural violation of human rights. Based on sixteen interviews with women with a history of domestic violence, the vulnerability concept was used to analyse the relationship between the subjective perspectives of the interviewees and the programmatic and social components that make these women vulnerable. This is turn permitted the analyse of women's social representations in relation to violence and to the means of confronting it, as well as women's objective and subjective relationship with health services.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The social in health: trajectory and contributions of Maria Cecilia Ferro Donnangelo
    (2015) SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; MOTA, Andre
    This text covers the professional and scientific career of Maria Cecilia Ferro Donnangelo, professor, researcher and influential intellectual in the area of Collective Health. Born in 1940, and killed in a car accident in 1983, she actively participated in the emergence of Collective Health in Brazil and greatly influenced the creation of the sub-areas of Social Science and the Humanities in the health field. Her brief biography, contextualized professional choices and scientific production is hereby presented. Graduated in pedagogy at the time of national developmentalism with a post graduation in Sociology, Donnangelo fell into the triangulated area of Education, Sociology and Health, focusing medicine as a social practice and as a profession in society. Always with an eye to human rights and an ongoing dialogue with the modern Brazilian state and public policy, she examined questions of the social aspects in health and education, as well as questions of health education as a social tool. An educator of great prestige, her published work was limited. However, due to her foundational presence, her writings are classic references with assured presence and contributions for today and also vital to the future development of the Brazilian Collective Health.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    An interdisciplinary space of scientific communication in Collective (Public) Health: the journal Interface - Communication, Health, Education
    (2015) CYRINO, Antonio Pithon; LIMA, Elizabeth Araujo; GARCIA, Vera Lucia; TEIXEIRA, Ricardo Rodrigues; FORESTI, Miriam Celi Pimentel Porto; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    This is a reflection upon 17 years of experience in the production of an interdisciplinary scientific journal, the publication ""Interface: Communication, Health, Education"", whose scope is in the fields of Collective (Public) Health, Education and Communication. It also examines retrospectively the themes published by the journal, seeking to identify them in different sections of this publication. Finally, the evolution of the journal is analyzed.
  • article 49 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Violence at work and depressive symptoms in primary health care teams: a cross-sectional study in Brazil
    (2015) SILVA, Andrea Tenorio Correia da; PERES, Maria Fernanda Tourinho; LOPES, Claudia de Souza; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; SUSSER, Ezra; MENEZES, Paulo Rossi
    Implementation of primary care has long been a priority in low- and middle-income countries. Violence at work may hamper progress in this field. Hence, we examined the associations between violence at work and depressive symptoms/major depression in primary care teams (physicians, nurses, nursing assistants, and community health workers). A cross-sectional study was undertaken in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil. We assessed a random sample of Family Health Program teams. We investigated depressive symptoms and major depression using the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), and exposure to violence at work in the previous 12 months using a standardized questionnaire. Associations between exposure to violence and depressive symptoms/major depression were analyzed using multinomial logistic regression. Of 3141 eligible workers, 2940 (93 %) completed the interview. Of these, 36.3 % (95 % CI 34.6-38.1) presented intermediate depressive symptoms, and 16 % (95 % CI 14.6-17.2), probable major depression. The frequencies of exposure to the different types of violence at work were: insults (44.9 %), threats (24.8 %), physical aggression (2.3 %), and witnessing violence (29.5 %). These exposures were strongly and progressively associated with depressive symptoms (adjusted odds ratio 1.67 for exposure to one type of violence; and 5.10 for all four types), and probable major depression (adjusted odds ratio 1.84 for one type; and 14.34 for all four types). Primary care workers presenting depressive symptoms and those who have experienced violence at work should be assisted. Policy makers should prioritize strategies to prevent these problems, since they can threaten primary care sustainability.