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 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A Revista de Saúde Pública na produção bibliográfica sobre Violência e Saúde (1967-2015)
    (2016) SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; BARROS, Claudia; DOLIVEIRA, Ana Flavia Pires Lucas; PERES, Maria Fernanda Tourinho
    This article retrieved the publications from the Revista de Saude Publica journal (from 1967 to 2015) on violence and health, on the SciELO and PubMed bases, by searching for the terms ""violence"", ""suicide"", ""aggression"", ""bullying"", and ""external causes"",registered in any part of the text. We found 130 articles (the first one published in 1974). We observed: increase of publications over time, with decrease in the last five years; similar production volume in lethal and non-lethal violence; later publication of the latter; few studies in qualitative research; mostly descriptive production; and visualization of the problem more by the acts than by contexts or motivations and aggressors. Social markers were little approached, appearing, from largest to smallest frequency, social class, gender, race/ethnicity, and generation. Human rights were little used and only recently used as analytical framework, connected more to gender than to social class. Although Revista de Saude Publica has registered the theme in its publications, consolidating it as scientific production line, there is still great explanatory theoretical rarefaction and little intersectionality between violence, social inequalities, and human rights.
  • bookPart
    Violência e Saúde
    (2016) SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; D’OLIVEIRA, Ana Flávia Lucas Pires
  • bookPart
    Aspectos Sociais e Culturais da Saúde e da Doença
    (2016) COUTO, Márcia Thereza; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; AYRES, José Ricardo de Carvalho Mesquita
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Medical power and the crisis in bonds of trust within contemporary medicine
    (2016) AZEREDO, Yuri Nishijima; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    Based on the Brazilian context, this paper addresses medical power in terms of the current conflicts in the intersubjective relationships that doctors establish in their work, conflicts considered here as a product of a crisis of trust connected to recent historical transformations in the medical practice. Reading these conflicts as questions of an ethical and moral order, we use Hanna Arendt's theoretical formulations to further analyze this crisis of trust. In this way, utilizing the concepts of "crisis," "tradition, "power," "authority," and "natality," we search for new meanings regarding these conflicts, enabling new paths and solutions that avoid nostalgia for the past.
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Reasons for choosing the profession and profile of newly qualified physicians in Brazil
    (2016) SCHEFFER, MÁRIO CÉSAR; GUILLOUX, ALINE GIL ALVES; POZ, MARIO ROBERTO DAL; SCHRAIBER, LILIA BLIMA
    SUMMARY Objective To evaluate the socio-demographic profile, path to medical school admission and factors affecting the choice of becoming a physician in Brazil. Method Application of a structured questionnaire to 4,601 participants among the 16,323 physicians who graduated between 2014 and 2015 that subsequently registered with one of the 27 Regional Boards of Medicine (CRMs). Results The average age of participants is 27 years, 77.2% are white, 57% come from families with a monthly income greater than ten times the minimum wage, 65% have fathers who have completed higher education, 79.1% attended a private high school, and 63.5% selected the “will to make a difference in people’s lives or do good” as their main reason for choosing medicine, with some differences between the sexes and matriculation at a public or private medical school. Conclusion The recent politics for educational diversity and the opening of additional medical schools has not yet had an impact on the socio-demographic profile of graduates, who are mainly white, wealthy individuals.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Violência e vida familiar: abordagens psicanalíticas e de gênero
    (2016) MANDELBAUM, Belinda; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; D'OLIVEIRA, Ana Flávia P. L.
    Abstract We aim to examine the possibilities for an interdisciplinary dialogue between Psychoanalysis and gender theory, as expressed in studies about violence on Collective Health, to approach occurrences of aggression and abuse in family life and their possible impacts on health, with particular attention to the psychological impacts on children and women, as well as in the family group as a whole. Based on classical authors for both disciplinary contributions, we examine a concrete case taken from a family care situation. This examination consists of three interpretative dimensions: first, considerations on the individual case in its family context; second, the case seen from the perspective of cultural issues; and third, the relation between culture and its individualized expression in the case. We show the possibility of conducting an approach that integrates the intrapsychic dimension, which concerns the functioning of the inner world of the individuals involved, with the sociocultural and historical realities that constitute their context of life. With the aim of a comprehensive care of the cases, we highlight the practical importance of combining reflection and action of psychodynamic nature, a result of the examination of the intrapsychic impacts of violence from concepts such as trauma and terror, with recognition of cultural expressions in the individual and family realms, which strengthen normative acceptances of aggressions, victimizations, silencing, and trivialization of violence. The interdisciplinary dialogue makes possible to understand the development of culturally reinforced feelings and behaviors, such as fear and shame in the victims and repetition of violence in the aggressors.