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dc.date.accessioned2019
dc.date.available2019
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.citationPan American Health Organization. Sociocultural interactions of Cuban doctors participating in the More Doctors Program in Brazil. Brasilia : PAHO; 2019.en_US
dc.identifier.isbn978-92-75-12047-7
dc.identifier.urihttps://iris.paho.org/handle/10665.2/51097
dc.description.abstract[Foreword] This book focuses on a different and underexplored attribute of the More Doctors Program by surveying doctors in the feld with the purpose of identifying important answers regarding the sociocultural interactions of Cuban doctors recruited by the program and of producing knowledge, while also making improvements in the participation, still limited, of foreign doctors in the primary care services offered by SUS. It proposes to induce perceptions, memories, and possible explanations to anyone who is somehow associated with the Program’s development, especially those committed to universal health care and primary assistance as the only paths to an effective health system. For an organization such as PAHO/WHO, whose institutional mission is to articulate collaborative strategic efforts among Member States, one of our responsibilities is to mobilize Cuban doctors and create all the necessary conditions for their work in Brazil. In addition, we also need to attempt to understand the sociocultural interactions that have resulted from their professional practice. This, to all of us, constitutes a duty, as it consciously allows us to repay the trust of the Brazilian and Cuban governments. To the approximately 18 thousand Cuban doctors who currently work or have worked in Brazil, the present publication could mean “…a new look at the Brazil we don’t see in soap operas….” They will certainly understand what we mean by that. This expression was used in several interviews conducted throughout the present research.en_US
dc.description.tableofcontentsForeword; Chapter I: Introduction: Sociocultural interactions of cuban doctors in Brazil; Chapter II: Theoretical approaches to South-South migration flows of highly skilled professionals: the roles of cuban cooperation and PAHO/WHO; Chapter III: Health and the press: Media content analysis of the More Doctors Program’s implementation period; Chapter IV: Knowledge exchange between cuban and Brazilian doctors: methodological notes; Chapter V: Cuban doctors in indigenous areas: nature, disease and cure in a “Brazil not seen in soap operas”; Chapter VI: Cuban doctors in urban peripheral areas: an analysis of unexpected integrative processes; Chapter VII: Social Interaction, community insertion and social cultural interaction of Cuban Doctors in rural areas and quilombos of Brazil; Chapter VII: Exchange doctors’ suggestions and criticisms to the More Doctors Program; Chapter IX: Epilogue.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherPAHOen_US
dc.subjectTechnical Cooperationen_US
dc.subjectSouth-South Cooperationen_US
dc.subjectCubaen_US
dc.subjectSocial Participationen_US
dc.subjectCultureen_US
dc.subjectPrimary Health Careen_US
dc.subjectUniversal Access to Health Care Servicesen_US
dc.subjectHealth Programs and Plansen_US
dc.titleSociocultural interactions of Cuban doctors participating in the More Doctors Program in Brazilen_US
dc.typePublicationsen_US
dc.rights.holderPan American Health Organizationen_US
dc.contributor.corporatenamePan American Health Organizationen_US
paho.isfeatured0en_US
paho.publisher.countryBrazilen_US
paho.publisher.cityBrasília, D.F.pt_BR
paho.source.centercodeUS1.1en_US
paho.subjectCat 4. Health Systemsen_US
paho.contributor.departmentRepresentação da OPAS/OMS no Brasilen_US
paho.iswhotranslationNoen_US


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