SELMA LANCMAN

(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/34 - Laboratório de Ciências da Reabilitação, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 3 de 3
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Workers' health intersectoriality: old questions, new perspectives?
    (2020) LANCMAN, Selma; DALDON, Maria Teresa Bruni; JARDIM, Tatiana de Andrade; ROCHA, Thaina de Oliveira; BARROS, Juliana de Oliveira
    The construction of Workers' Health ( WH) intersectoriality, while fundamental, has been a challenge for this field of knowledge and practice. This paper aims to present and discuss how intersectorality is addressed in WH public policies, in what contexts it is used, how it is defined, and the guidelines for its implementation. This is qualitative documentary research that analyzed documents enacted between 1986 and 2015, accessed through the databases of the Ministries of Health, Labor and Social Security, and the websites of FUNDACENTRO and the National Association of Occupational Medicine (ANAMT). There is clear leadership of the health sector in the documents proposing the construction of intersectoriality. Terms such as ""integrated actions"", ""articulation"", ""dialogue"", and ""integration"", and finally, ""intersectoriality"" were used sometimes as synonyms or conceptual advances, and generic, polysemic, and supposedly consensual expressions. Despite the developing concept of intersectoriality in the policies of this field and the growing participation of the different sectors in this construction, few clear propositions about the effectiveness of this practice among managers and workers underlying the field are observed.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Hospital workers in times of pandemic: singularities, journeys and potential
    (2021) LANCMAN, Selma; WIJK, Livia Bustamante van; ROCHA, Thaina de Oliveira; SOUZA, Nicole Beltrame Medeiros de; SILVA, Talita Naiara Rossi da
    The aim of this experience report is to present singularities, journeys and potential arising from the development and implementation of the Occupational Therapy, Health and Work Program (ProTOST) in a university hospital during the first months of the pandemic. The program was guided by the principles of activity ergonomics and psychodynamics of work and based on the need to build participatory actions. Work reflection groups were created involving 15 hospital sectors and 140 workers. The groups provided staff with spaces for collective listening about work and increased the visibility of efforts and horizontal and vertical recognition processes. In addition, they contributed to the study of work situations, discussions about the transformation of work processes and building strategies to address the challenges faced by the hospital aggravated by the pandemic.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Intersectoriality in health and work in the current brazilian context: the utopia of reality?
    (2020) BARROS, Juliana de Oliveira; DALDON, Maria Teresa Bruni; ROCHA, Thaina de Oliveira; SZNELWAR, Laerte Idal; LANCMAN, Selma
    The social-economic-political scenario since 2015 presents new challenges and characterizations for the worker's comprehensive health care. The aim was to give visibility to the perspective of public policies managers and formulators directed to the worker regarding intersectoriality in the transition period in the last three Brazilian governments. To this end, we interviewed some people from different sectors (Health, Labor, Social Welfare, and Justice) linked to the workers' health. There was a consensus concerning the difficulties faced in implementing intersectoral practice. Overall, this led to the weakening of building a systemic view of the field and of how a sector, rather than completing actions of another one, is part of a single system that aims to ensure the worker's health. This is an issue of the field vulnerability that toughened the construction of collective strategies of resistance to labor and social welfare reforms.