Vínculo no manejo da tuberculose na Atenção Primária à Saúde: ótica dos profissionais de saúde: DOI: 10.15343/0104-7809.202044433444
Melisane Regina Lima Ferreira, Alexsandra Araújo Santos, Jeanne Lúcia Gadelha de Freitas, Letícia Auxiliadora Fragoso da Silva, Valéria Moreira da Silva, Nathalia Halax Orfão
LA Referencia (Red Federada de Repositorios Institucionales de Publicaciones Científicas) · 2020-07
Abstract
The way in which health units belonging to Primary Health Care (PHC) are organized is considered a potential element inpromoting the construction of bond between professionals and tuberculosis (TB) patients. The objective was to analyze thebond TB patients have with the care management in PHC in the city of Porto Velho, RO, from the perspective of healthprofessionals. This is a descriptive, survey-type study, carried out cross-sectionally from a quantitative approach, with nurses,doctors, nursing technicians/assistants and Community Health Agents, through an interview using the dimension concerningbond in the questionnaire Primary Care Assessment Tool (PCATool), which has the Likert scale as response categories, andwas analyzed by classifying the average scores as unsatisfactory (values between one and two), regular (around three), orsatisfactory (between four and five), after complying with the ethical precepts. 266 health professionals were interviewed,whose perspectives, regardless of the professional category, was generally satisfactory toward bond, in relation to the coresponsibilityof TB cases, acceptability and need for incentives, as well as the evaluation of the health team work process.However, it was shown to be regular regarding the stigma of the disease, which makes it difficult to change the teams' workprocess in order to enhance bilateral relationships. In view of these findings, the need to recognize that TB affects all aspectsof life and that the focus of longitudinal care must underlie all other factors related to treatment is identified.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Likert scale
- Nursing
- Primary health care
- Primary care
- Health care
- Focus group
- Stigma (botany)
- Family medicine
- Health professionals
- Tuberculosis
- Health services
- Perspective (graphical)