AmericanJournal of Public Health

Similar documents
., 1V -, QS. 44* 1, "~~~~~~~~~i,tr~;k

ONOMIC ND OCIAL COUNCIL

WORLD HEALTH! ORGANIZATION PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION. regional committee. directing council. i 2

Health Workforce Planning Techniques and the Policy Context International Health Workforce Collaborative 6 May 2013, Quebec City

HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS

AREAS OF FOCUS POLICY STATEMENTS

The Local Health Department

International Health Regulations (IHR) Implementation status in the Americas

Standard Syllabus for Postgraduate Educational Courses in Radiation Protection and the Safe Use of Radiation Sources

Methodology of Health Protection for Local Areas ABSTRACT OF REPORT ON FRANCE. finance is voted by a Council of communal representatives.

Before we get started

GIS analysis for structural changes in public health system

Areas of Focus Statements of Purpose and Goals

HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS

Communicable Diseases Prevention and Control Act

140th SESSION OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

This is Public Health, A Canadian History

Communicable Diseases Prevention and Control Act

This scholarship is awarded on a first come, first serve basis in accordance with eligibility.

Integrated approach for disaster reduction in health: Setting new experiences in Cuba

Discussions. Technical. CD17/DT/2 (Eng.) 11 July 1967 ORIGINAL: SPANISH. Provisional Agenda Item 20

PLANNING HEALTH CARE FOR INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS: EXPERIENCES IN UGANDA

Xl. PUBLIC HEALTH PERSONAL HEALTH

Health Bill* diseases of the arteries and kidneys are. public health departments and the provision. With this object in view the Honorable

IMCI. information. Integrated Management of Childhood Illness: Global status of implementation. June Overview

Grant Programs Directorate Information Bulletin No. 409 June 1, 2016

HEALTH INSURANCE FOR THE INDIGENT PEOPLE IN INDONESIA

Undertaken in 2010, the Kenya Service Provision Assessment (KSPA) assessed the

Supporting the Delivery of Technical Cooperation: The Secretariat. In its work with its Member States, as well as within the

FUNDAMENTALS OF THE LEGISLATION OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION ON HEALTH PROTECTION NO OF JULY

Updated July 24, 2017 ASTHO Legislative Summary House FY18 Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Bill

Oshawa General Hospital School of Nursing

Chapter I. GENERAL PROVISIONS

THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE WHO/UNICEF-ASSISTED MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH PROJECT IN YUGOSLAVIA (l6.9)

Maternal Child Health Capacity for Zika Response. F e b r u a r y 2018

Evolution of the International Health Regulations. International Health Regulations. The new IHR

Rahmatullah Vinjhar. Lecturer Nursing ION DUHS.

The Third Annual LINC Symposium Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA, October th, 2005

NEPAL EARTHQUAKE 2015 Country Update and Funding Request May 2015

The Role of Epidemiology in Shaping Public Health in the Americas: Past and Future directions The Remit of PAHO

Analysis of the results of the Survey applied to the NSO in the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean September 2011

HCHS/SOL Follow-up Interview Form Contact Year 8

Primary objective: Gain a global perspective on child health by working in a resource- limited setting within a different cultural context.

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Ministry of Defense General Staff Command Medical Services Directorate King Fahad Armed Forces Hospital, Jeddah

Argentina: Dengue Outbreak

The Pan American Health Planning Program

Bolivia: Dengue Outbreak

offered by the INSTITUT NATIONAL DE SANTÉ PUBLIQUE DU QUÉBEC

Kingston Health Sciences Centre EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PROGRAM

A/58/320. General Assembly. United Nations

Health Promotion and Protection

Manpower Employment Outlook Survey: Costa Rican employers report optimistic hiring plans for the April June quarter

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

Pure Michigan Export Program Opening New Doors for Michigan Exporters

Global Health Assessment Strategies. Ricardo Izurieta

care, commitment and communication for a healthier world

HELEN s Logo. Program started on August 1st, 2005

Concept Proposal to International Affairs Directorate

Brandon Regional Health Authority Breastfeeding Framework. February 2005 Updated January 2006

María del Coriseo González Izquierdo

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY BUILDING A JUST WORLD. Summary. Quantitative Data Analysis

Minnesota CHW Curriculum

ANNEX V - HEALTH A. INTRODUCTION

Surgeons of Hope Foundation

Current challenges to healthcare in Brazil

PORTUGAL DATA A1 Population see def. A2 Area (square Km) see def.

Interamerican Network on Government Procurement. Trinidad Inostroza President October 2016

IHR News. The WHO quarterly bulletin on IHR implementation. 31 March 2009, No. 6

Latin America Investment Facility (LAIF)

Latin America Information for awards commencing in 2014

MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL WELFARE STRATEGY OF THE HEALTH PROMOTION IN THE REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA

1Identification and. Formulation of Projects. Identification, Formulation and Planning. Chapter 1. Outline of JICA Activities

The Syrian Arab Republic

George Bernard Shaw. Irish dramatist & socialist ( )

Equal Distribution of Health Care Resources: European Model

Characterization of the Process for Creating Harmonized Statistics on Information and Communication Technologies in the National Statistics Offices

The Alliance 4 Universities. At the forefront of research, academic excellence, and technology & innovation

Mauritania Red Crescent Programme Support Plan

The big health need: Less criticism, more resources

National Health Strategy

STAFF REPORT ACTION REQUIRED. Supporting Breastfeeding in Toronto SUMMARY. Date: January 15, Board of Health. To: Medical Officer of Health

ODILE CHARLOTTE TCHEKOUNTOUO CV

Appendix A. Local Public Health Agency Services and Functions. Comparing North Carolina s Local Public Health Agencies 1

IMCI at the Referral Level: Hospital IMCI

Education: Making a Difference

Global Services in LAC

INDONESIA S COUNTRY REPORT

Uzbekistan: Woman and Child Health Development Project

BIOSC Human Anatomy and Physiology 1

Nursing Act 8 of 2004 section 65(2)

Previous and Future Position of Iran's Health. between the World's Countries. Health and Fertility Rights Network

El Salvador: Basic Health Programme in the Region Zona Oriente / Basic health infrastructure

HEALTH CARE: LESSONS FROM

Assessment of the performance of TB surveillance in Indonesia main findings, key recommendations and associated investment plan

Sudan High priority 2b - The principal purpose of the project is to advance gender equality Gemta Birhanu,

A university wishing to have an accredited program in adult Infectious Diseases must also sponsor an accredited program in Internal Medicine.

Content. The global Zika virus emergency 2. I. Be the first, be fast, and be flexible 5

Leaving on a jet plane: My patient is leaving. What do I do?

Medical Officer of Health

Health and Nutrition Public Investment Programme

Transcription:

AmericanJournal of Public Health and THE NATION'S HEALTH Volume 40 September, 1950 Number 9 Public Health Administration in Latin America* M. E. BUSTAMANTE, M.D., DR.P.H. Secretary General, Pan American Sanitary Bureau, Washington, D. C. AVAILABLE information on Latin American public health organizations is scattered in a large number of publications, many not well known in the United States and Canada. They are written in Spanish, Portuguese, or French, and their distribution does not reach the reading desk of the public health workers, who form the majority of members of the American Public Health Association. THE FIELD There are, within the Latin American area, eighteen Spanish-speaking republics with 98,067,450 (1947) people; one Portuguese-speaking with 47,550,000 (1947); one republic with four departments " de la France metropolitaine et d'autre mer" where French is spoken, with a total of 597,359 inhabitants. Also within the area are several Dutch and English territories, with special types of public health administration, related to those of the mother countries. The climate, the cultural background, the agricultural problems, the growing industrialization of Latin America, and the health problems are of great variety; the patterns of medical and public health organizations follow trends which at times appear familiar to North American workers and at times involve solutions due to different situations or at times due to strong personal influences. These differences are more apparent than in the United States, where schools of public health as a well defined educational force, are responsible for the orientation of programs and preparation of leaders. THE PHILOSOPHY OF PUBLIC HEALTH ADMINISTRATION IN LATIN AMERICA The European medical schools prepared, particularly in the 19th century and early in the 20th century, a group of clinicians, professors of internal medicine, surgeons, and bacteriologists, who brought to Latin America, medical specialization and guidance in anatomy, physiology, surgery, ophthalmology, cardiology, obstetrics, pediatrics, parasitology, and pathology. To this group * Presented before the Health Officers Section of the American Public Health Association at the Seventyseventh belonged also the Annual Meeting in founders of New York, the Bacteriological and Antirabic Institutes of N. Y., October 25, 1949. [1067]

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH 1068 Sept., 1950 South and Central America and. Hygiene was thought of as a subject of secondary importance and limited practical application. The history of medicine and of public health, affected so clearly in the Anglo- Saxon countries by the two World Wars, shows also in Latin America the results of progress in the United States of America, since 1920 when the Rockefeller Foundation gave its first fellowships; a few years later the gradual influence of medical schools, hospitals, laboratories, medical, biological, and sociological centers of learning from the North is noticeable. The relationship of medicine and public health to social conditions, and the place of health among the elements of human progress and economic improvement are facts well accepted by public health workers in Latin America. Every epidemiological study takes into account: population, family and social conditions, communications, agriculture, water supplies, housing, and medical services, with the study of disease prevention and control. The studies of fellows at the schools of public health and their training visits to health departments and laboratories, divisions of maternal and child health, of statistics and epidemiology, of tuberculosis and of venereal disease control, have produced influences perceptible in Latin American departments of health. The thoughts of North American health workers have produced new ideas and variations of public health administration procedures which sometimes are quite different from the original concept of the United States organizations; as is the case, for example, when the " local health units," established in the United States or the " health or sanitary units " of many countries, reach a stage of broad expansion attained, for example, by the coordination in a unified technical and administrative unit embracing a complete state, of federal, state, and municipal health organizations, as in. The program of the "cobrdinated health services" in excludes as federal jurisdictional matters those relating to: international health relations; quarantinable diseases; pure food and drugs laws and regulations; control of narcotic drugs; but takes in: epidemiology and statistics; maternal and child health and welfare; environmental sanitation, food sanitation and control of food handlers, laboratory services, administration and preparation of budgets and all health units within the particular state. The coordination of national and local health services presented for the first time to the IX Pan American Sanitary Conference, held in 1934 in Buenos Aires, is a proposed topic for discussion at the XIII Pan American Sanitary Conference to be held in 1950 in the. Such co6rdination is needed because of the relations of national health services to state or provincial health services. Three nations: Brazil,, and, have states as sovereign political entities; Argentina has political and administrative autonomous provinces; other nations are not federal but central republics, and their local health organizations are more or less independent from the national health administration; in all countries, municipalities have certain rights and duties regarding health matters. In general, the national Ministry deals directly with international health problems, quarantinable or pestilential diseases, control of narcotics, and purity of drugs, tuberculosis, venereal diseases, and malaria control, practice of medicine and national welfare institutions. PLACE OF PUBLIC HEALTH ADMINISTRA- TION IN THE POLITICAL STRUCTURE Every one of the twenty Latin American Republics has its national health organization under a member of the

Vol. 40 LATIN AMERICAN PUBLIC HEALTH 1069 Presidential Cabinet. In most countries the head of public health is a medical man and his official title is Minister of Public Health; in three countries: Costa Rica,, and the, the equivalent title is Secretary of Public Health. The Ministry dealing with hygiene includes social welfare in: Cuba Social security and health are in the same Ministry in,,, and. Education and public health Ministers are designated in Brazil and Haiti. In, the Ministry includes Labor, Social Security, and Public Health, and Honduras includes: State, Justice, and Public Health. Ministries of Hygiene or of Public Health, with no additional title, exist in Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Nicaragua, and Uruguay. One country, El Salvador, has a General Direction of Public Health under the Ministry of Social Welfare. There are fourteen General Directors of Health; two Under-Secretaries of Health; two of Health and Social Welfare, and two Ministers with no assistants for public health. The large part taken by the welfare institutions, hospitals, asylums, and medical dispensaries is understandable when illnesses are prevalent and epidemic outbreaks are not rare; the treatment of diseases is a daily and urgent need and takes precedence; health and prevention are not of common knowledge and understanding, and the popular support exists for medical curative services and will remain so while suffering is obvious and immense and spectacular cures are not only demanded, but are possible, and appeal daily to the eyes and ears of millions of people. The services for medical care are very close to the services for prevention. Frequently, public health units have as an integral part of their program, outpatient departments, running side by side with the ordinary health sections. A natural complement of a prenatal and postnatal program is a clinical and therapeutical department for infant medical care. This development explains the numerous joint ministries of health and welfare and the two main administrative divisions under the minister: the general direction of public health and the general direction of public welfare. An interesting observation related to the countries more advanced in modern public health administration, refers to the fact that countries having in the past one or more severe epidemic diseases have today a better concept, both professional and popular, of what public health organizations are and what they can do for the improvement of general conditions; on the other hand, countries with less serious epidemics in their medical history remain in a state of indifference or mild enthusiasm toward the role of preventive medicine. Modern insecticides and new techniques for their application have proved to authorities and health workers that people do not accept insects as an inevitable evil. Today no population has refused, after its first observation, the visit of health inspectors, nurses, or doctors for the control of malaria and typhus; and the disappearance of mosquitoes, flies, lice, fleas, and cimex is becoming a daily common fact. Health workers are moving fast toward new programs of immunization against smallpox, diphtheria, typhoid, and in certain areas, of immunization

1070 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Sept., 1950 GENERAL DEATH RATES Deaths per 1,000 populations, 1946 Countries Argentina Bolivia * Brazil t Colombia Cuba t El Salvador United States Haiti Honduras Nicaragua Uruguay * Rates 9.4 14.8 17.8 15.6 12.9 10.6 16.6 17.2 15.5 10.0 17.1.... 16.3 19.4 10.8 11.1 8.3 12.6 10.3 8.1 15.0 * 1944. t Rio de Janeiro and State Capitals only. t 1945. Compiled from official sources by the Statistical Section, Pan American Sanitary Bureau, October 21, 1949. against yellow fever. Malaria services are expanding in several countries; diseases other than those transmitted by insect vectors are under attack; and the word " eradication " appears more frequently in the programs. Countries which have active, well trained groups of public health workers are in the lead and are greatly interested in preparing their personnel by providing training centers and schools of public health. Summarizing the obstacles and the constructive forces, we find among the difficulties: Lack of recognition of public health as a career, with: (a) full-time personnel, (b) security of tenure, (c) adequate compensation. Inadequate budgets for preventive medicine. Size of problems depending on basic solutions: environmental sanitation, reduction of infant mortality. Newness of concepts: prevention of disease, conservation of health. Materialistic view of medical activities as a source of income, which draws the young graduates to the practice of medicine in cities and makes jobs a place not to serve but to gain additional income. INFANT MORTALITY RATES Number of deaths under one year per 1,000 live births, 1946 Country Argentina Bolivia Brazil * Colombia Cuba El Salvador United States Haiti Honduras Nicaragua Uruguay Rates 79.0 *... 162.2 150.0 101.7 142.8 133.0 113.0 33.8 114.5 79.2 98.6 111.0 101.2 60.2 52.0 114.0 85. 7 102.0 * Rio de Janeiro and State Capitals only. Compiled from official sources by the Statistical Section, Pan American Sanitary Bureau, October 21, 1949. CONSTRUCTIVE FORCES Good orientation of nucleus of professional health groups, many trained outside of their own countries. New schools of public health, with sound programs for doctors, nurses, engineers, inspectors. Strength of international public health coordination and cooperation. Active and enthusiastic workers. Awaking of interest in public health of political leaders and of the public, by the results of new insecticides and improvement of immunization procedures against childhood diseases. RESULTS Typical examples of accomplishments are: Eradication of malaria in and considerable progress in the Argentine Northwest, Brazil, and. Eradication of Aedes aegypti in Bolivia, areas of Brazil, and progress in almost every other Latin American country. Reduction of typhus in and. International cooperation in sound, longrange programs, as the Institute of Nutrition of Central America and, with the coordinating and partial financial support from the Pan American Sanitary Bureau.

Vol. 40 LATIN AMERICAN PUBLIC HEALTH 1071 THE FUTURE National health administrations in Latin America are in a state of evolution, and progress is evident within each country, and local public health workers are well prepared and active. The outside favorable forces are of different origins, most of them due to United States institutions and organizations, such as the United States Public Health Service; the Rockefeller Foundation; the Kellogg Foundation in recent years; the Institute of Inter-American Affairs; and for a long time the Schools of Hygiene and Public Health of the Universities of Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Ann Arbor, and recently of Minnesota; and the visits of professors from the United States to the southern countries. The role of the Pan American Sanitary Bureau has been and is internationally very important, working since 1902 for the coordination of health activities, the exchange of information, the distribution of knowledge, and the creation of a consciousness of international relationship of responsibility of each nation for the health of other nations; a concept enlarged now by the World Health Organization, of which the Pan American Sanitary Bureau is the Regional Office for the Americas. Regulations for Colored Margarine New oleomargarine regulations of the federal Food and Drug Administration went into effect on July 1. The Act repealing the federal taxes on oleomargarine also indicates provisions to prevent the unannounced substitution of colored oleomargarine for butter on the market and in public eating places. Oleomargarine on the grocer's shelves must be so labelled and every public eating place will be required to notify its patrons by conspicuous placards or on the menu, and also with the individual serving, if colored oleomargarine is served as a spread. In a number of states, however, the sale of colored margarine is still forbidden by state law.