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Primary Health Care in Northern and Northeastern Brazil: mapping team distribution disparities.

Adauto Martins Soares FilhoCintia Honório VasconcelosAlexsandro Cosme DiasAna Célia Caetano de SouzaEdgar Merchan-HamannMaria Rocineide Ferreira da Silva
Published in: Ciencia & saude coletiva (2020)
This study analyzes the spatial pattern of implementation of Primary Health Care (PHC) teams in Northern and Northeastern Brazil. This is an ecological study on the rates of Community Health Workers (ACS), Family Health Team (eSF), Oral Health Team (eSB), and Family Health Extended Center (NASF) based on data from the Ministry of Health (MoH). The analysis of the area data identified patterns of spatial dependence of the municipalities for the rates, using Moran indices and scatterplots to visualize critical areas' clusters (95% confidence). Municipalities of the North (n=450) and Northeast (n=1,794) had 132,174 ACS, 18,405 eSF, 13,017 eSB, and 2,205 NASF. The proportion of municipalities with rates within the recommended by the MoH were: ACS (>1.33), 96% in the North and 98.5% in the Northeast; eSF (>2.9/1,000), 54% and 80% in the respective regions; eSB (>2.9/10,000) 28% and 59% in these respective regions. NASF teams were deployed in 70% of the North and 89% of the Northeast. Except for ACS, the North was a critical team area, mainly in Pará, Rondônia, Amazonas, and Amapá. In the Northeast, these areas were smaller and concentrated mainly in western Bahia and eastern Maranhão. The Northeast showed a better composition of teams and a smaller extent of critical areas.
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