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 - 10 de 50
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Institutionalization of Public Health Care in Sao Paulo between 1930 and 1940
    (2013) MOTA, Andre; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    The aim of the study was to interpret and understand the institutionalization of public health care in the state of Sao Paulo over the years 1930-1940, based on the history of medical specialties. The methodology involved analysis of new sources of documents, which were compared with the existing literature, thereby leading to identification of new indices relating to the issue of eugenics and the presence of physicians' religious beliefs as a social movement. As physicians became public health experts, they proposed a project to elevate the Brazilian race, by merging the hygienist discourse with sanitary actions. Sao Paulo sought primacy in this project, believing that this was a State already constituted by a race of ""historically healthy men"". Religious beliefs influenced the debate and the decisions of that time with regard to the established order within public health. In this manner, it could be shown that, historically, public health discourse was constituted by merging technical-scientific issues with political-ideological and cultural issues, producing a mixture of different interests and corporative perspectives of the profession.
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Obstacles and facilitators to primary health care offered to women experiencing domestic violence: a systematic review
    (2020) D'OLIVEIRA, Ana Flavia Pires Lucas; PEREIRA, Stephanie; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; GRAGLIA, Cecilia Guida Vieira; AGUIAR, Janaina Marques de; SOUSA, Patricia Carvalho De; BONIN, Renata Granusso
    Systematic review of the literature addressing obstacles and facilitators for the care of women, in situations of domestic violence (DV) in primary health care (PHC) in Brazil. The bibliographic review found 1,048 references. The analysis encompassed 39 articles complying with the inclusion and exclusion criteria. The material was centered on representations and beliefs of practitioners. The main obstacles were related to: conceptualizing DV as a health issue, resulting into difficulties to identify the problem and managing care encounters; lack of training and teamwork; scarce intersectoral network, fear and lack of time. The facilitators were mainly: introducing a gender and human rights perspective, bonding and embracement, teamwork and multisectoral work. Despite the potential of PHC to address the issue, few studies considered perspectives of management and financing, considered as key to overcome the problems pointed out.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Recurrent Violence, Violence with Complications, and Intimate Partner Violence Against Pregnant Women and Breastfeeding Duration
    (2021) RIBEIRO, Marizelia Rodrigues Costa; BATISTA, Rosangela Fernardes Lucena; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; PINHEIRO, Feliciana Santos; SANTOS, Alcione Miranda dos; SIMOES, Vanda Maria Ferreira; CONFORTIN, Susana Cararo; ARISTIZABAL, Liliana Yanet Gomez; YOKOKURA, Ana Valeria Carvalho Pires; SILVA, Antonio Augusto Moura da
    Background:Few studies have investigated the association between violence against pregnant women in terms of recurrence, complications, and perpetrators of violence, and breastfeeding duration. This study verifies whether recurrent violence, violence with pregnancy complications, and intimate partner violence (IPV) against pregnant women are associated with shorter exclusive breastfeeding up to the infant's 6th month and breastfeeding up to the 12th month of life. Materials and Methods:A cohort study with a convenience sample of 1,146 pregnant women was performed. Follow-up assessments were conducted at birth, and at 12-36 months. Survival analysis was used to verify whether recurrent violence, violence with pregnancy complications, and IPV were associated with reduced duration of exclusive breastfeeding and breastfeeding. Results:The adjusted Cox regression revealed no difference regarding exclusive breastfeeding duration among mothers exposed or not exposed to violence and according to who perpetrated the violence. The risk of an infant not being breastfed within the first 12 months of life increased in cases of violence before/during pregnancy (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.03-1.88), recurrent psychological/physical/sexual violence during pregnancy (95% CI = 1.11-1.92), recurrent psychological violence (95% CI = 1.05-1.96), and recurrent physical/sexual violence (95% CI = 1.01-2.39). Violence with pregnancy complications (95% CI = 0.94-2.22) was not associated with breastfeeding interruption. Similar risks of breastfeeding interruption were observed for IPV (95% CI = 0.96-1.87) and violence perpetrated by other family members (95% CI = 0.83-1.89). Conclusions:We observed a shorter breastfeeding duration up to 12 months of life in cases of recurrent violence.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A Atuação dos Psicólogos em Unidades Básicas de Saúde na Cidade de São Paulo
    (2012) ARCHANJO, Auryana Maria; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    This paper describes the results of a study about the practice of psychologists in primary care units in the city of Sao Paulo, Southeastern Brazil. It was a qualitative research and 17 semi-structured interviews were performed with psychologists who work in those services. Collected data were analyzed through Theme-based Content Analysis, and the theoretical framework was Institutional Analysis, health work studies and the history of Psychology as a profession. Two connected points were focused: the social status changes that the regulation of the profession brought to Psychology in Brazil and the public mental health policies in the State and city of Sao Paulo from the 1970s onwards. Results revealed changes, tensions and contradictions between traditional clinical psychology and institutional clinical psychology and also revealed new challenges when psychologists started to work with clinical and sanitary practices, and had to accept political-institutional impositions.
  • 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.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Violência institucional e humanização em saúde: apontamentos para o debate
    (2017) AZEREDO, Yuri Nishijima; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    Abstract This paper starts from humanization policies and the academic debate around them to reflect about institutional violence inside health services. Based on research on scientific publications in Collective Health, it was observed that violence in relationships between health professionals and users – which is at the core of the humanization’s debate – is conceptualized as an excessive power in exercise of professional authority. Using Hannah Arendt thinking as theoretical contributions regarding the concepts of ‘authority’, ‘power’ and ‘violence’, our objective is to define and rethink these phenomena. Melting these reflections with the history of institutionalization of health in Brazil, and especially the changes in medical work during the twentieth century, we conclude that the problem of institutional violence on health services is not based on excess of authority and power of professionals, but rather in its opposite. When there is a vacuum of professional authority, and relationships between people do not happen through power relations, there is space for the phenomenon of violence.
  • article 33 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Impact of exposure to intimate partner violence on children's behavior
    (2011) DURAND, Julia Garcia; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; FRANCA-JUNIOR, Ivan; BARROS, Claudia
    OBJECTIVE: To analyze the relationship between intimate partner violence (IPV) against women and children's dysfunctional behaviors and school problems. METHODS: Population-based study part of the WHO Multicountry Study on Domestic Violence Against Women including 790 women living with their children aged five to 12 years in two different regions of Brazil: the city of Sao Paulo, Southeastern Brazil, and Zona da Mata area in the state of Pernambuco, Northeastern Brazil. Three multivariate models were developed to estimate the strength of the relationship between explanatory variables such as social and community support, stressful events of life, sociodemographic factors and ""IPV severity,"" among others, and three outcomes: number of dysfunctional behaviors; aggressive behavior; and school problems (interruption, drop out or failure). RESULTS: Exposure to severe physical and/or sexual IPV was associated to school problems, behavioral dysfunctions in general and aggressive behaviors in the univariate analysis. Exposure to severe IPV against women was associated to the occurrence of three or more dysfunctional behaviors in their children, regardless of common mental disorder, low schooling, physical IPV against maternal grandmother, social and community support in the multivariate models. Severe IPV remained associated to aggressive behavior and school problems after adjustment for other sociodemographic variables, among others. Maternal mental health status was identified as a mediating factor between IPV exposure and dysfunctional behaviors, especially aggressive behaviors. CONCLUSIONS: Severe IPV affects children's behaviors and should be addressed in health policies for school-aged children through the development of common interventions for mothers and children.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Neonatal deaths in a highly vulnerable area in Santos, Sao Paulo State, Brazil: examining healthcare issues from women's perspective
    (2019) DEVINCENZI, Macarena Urrestarazu; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima
    The study analyzed the life and healthcare stories of women living in the Northwest Zone of the city of Santos, Sao Paulo State, Brazil, who had experienced neonatal deaths between January 2015 and July 2016. The study used triangulation of data from documents from the surveillance division, field diaries from visits to services, and interviews with the women. The interviews provided the main body of empirical data, based on narratives of the women's sexual and reproductive history, prenatal care, childbirth, and the experience of neonatal death. Of the 15 eligible cases, 8 women were interviewed, 6 of whom over 30 years of age and 2 under 30 years, all African-Brazilians, natives of Santos, and working in unskilled occupations. The data yielded the following results: (1) histories of unplanned pregnancies with various gestational risk factors; (2) the women's acknowledgment that they had experienced good access to health services; (3) questions concerning the need for tests and test results, understanding of complications, explanation of treatment approaches, and referrals; (4) prematurity, present in all the cases; (5) pain during labor, abandonment, and transfer to other services due to lack of beds in the neonatal ICU; (6) lack of integration between levels of care; and (7) after the infant's death, limited approaches and little orientation on comprehensive care related to the neonatal death. In conclusion, although the prenatal care was positively rated by the women, there was no comprehensive care for them in relation to the experience of neonatal death, with dialogue and an offer of more adequate contraceptive methods given their health history, as well as counseling on the emotional distress resulting from these experiences.
  • article 11 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The concept of health in Collective Health: contributions from social and historical critique of scientific production
    (2019) SILVA, Marcelo José de Souza e; SCHRAIBER, Lilia Blima; MOTA, André
    Abstract This study aimed to understand the concept of health within Collective Health. Our analysis starts from Marxism as a theoretical reference, both to define what is a “concept” and to understand the critical thinking of Collective Health. As empirical research the bibliographic production of the main journals that bring together Collective Health publications as a knowledge area was used, which resulted in 34 papers that somehow treated the concept of health, even if it was not the main object of the study. From this analysis we identified at least three different modalities of definitions, which varied both in the referential basis used to apprehend and analyze empirical realities concerning health, and in the conceptualization of social that could be in this analysis. We have also identified that the papers ranged between a production that was strictly descriptive of these empirical realities and strictly theoretical essays, rather than to produce a concrete (empirical) thought based on the elected definition of social. It was concluded that within Health Collective the concept of health has been taken, in general, either as a notion (a partial approximation of the object) or as a motto, from an ethical-political engagement that ends up relegating the theoretical-conceptual contribution to the background.