259 research outputs found
Association between malnutrition in children living in favelas, maternal nutritional status, and environmental factors
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association of malnutrition in children living in substandard settlements (slums) of Maceió, AL, Brazil, with maternal nutritional status and environmental conditions. METHODS: Cross-sectional study involving a probability sample of 2,075 mothers (18 to 45 years) and their children (4 months to 6 years), living in the slums of the city of Maceió. First, we conducted a cluster analysis with the purpose of choosing the settlements and the administrative region of the city of Maceió with the lowest human development index. After this analysis, the 7th Administrative Region was designated for the study, including its 23 substandard settlements. Socioeconomic, demographic, anthropometric, and maternal and child health data were collected by means of household survey. The statistical analysis included the odds ratio of a child to be malnourished, and the univariate regression was used to check which maternal variables were associated with this malnutrition. RESULTS: Chronic malnutrition (-2 standard deviations/height for age) was found in 8.6% of children and was associated with mother's age and educational level, type of residence, number of rooms, flooring, water supply, and low birth weight (< 2,500 g) in children aged < 24 months. We also found an association between child malnutrition and maternal height. Such association was not observed regarding body mass index. CONCLUSIONS: The high prevalence of malnutrition observed in these settlements was related to social and environmental conditions and short maternal height, who had weight deficit or weight excess.OBJETIVO: Investigar a associação da desnutrição em crianças residentes em assentamentos subnormais (favelas) de Maceió (AL) com o estado nutricional materno e as condições socioambientais. MÉTODOS: Estudo transversal, envolvendo amostra probabilística de 2.075 mães (18 a 45 anos) e respectivos filhos (4 meses a 6 anos), moradoras nas favelas da cidade de Maceió (AL). Para escolha dos assentamentos, procedeu-se primeiramente a uma análise de clusters para eleger a região administrativa da cidade de Maceió com menor índice de desenvolvimento humano. Após essa análise, a 7ª Região Administrativa foi a designada para o estudo, com seus 23 assentamentos subnormais. Os dados socioeconômicos, demográficos, antropométricos e de saúde materno-infantil foram coletados através de inquérito domiciliar. A estatística analisou a razão de chances de uma criança ser desnutrida, e a regressão univariada foi usada para verificar quais variáveis maternas estariam associadas a essa desnutrição. RESULTADOS: A desnutrição crônica (-2 desvios padrão/altura por idade) esteve presente em 8,6% das crianças e associou-se com idade e escolaridade materna, tipo de residência, número de cômodos, revestimento de piso, origem da água e baixo peso ao nascer (< 2.500 g) em crianças com idade < 24 meses. Encontrou-se também associação entre desnutrição infantil e baixa estatura materna, que não foi observada para índice de massa corporal. CONCLUSÕES: A alta prevalência de desnutrição infantil observada nesses assentamentos esteve relacionada às condições socioambientais e à baixa estatura das mães, que apresentaram déficit ou excesso de peso.Secretaria Estadual de Saúde de AlagoasUniversidade Federal de Alagoas Faculdade de NutriçãoUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP) Departamento de FisiologiaUNIFESP, Depto. de FisiologiaSciEL
Imaging diagnosis of forefoot in early rheumatoid arthritis patients
Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP) Departamento de Diagnóstico por ImagemUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP)UNIFESP, Depto. de Diagnóstico por ImagemUNIFESPSciEL
Educação ambiental nas aulas de química : a experiência de uma sequência didática sobre química verde
O artigo apresenta e discute uma proposta de Sequência Didática sobre Química Verde, envolvendo a Educação Ambiental nas aulas de Química da Educação Básica. Os resultados apontam que a Sequência Didática possibilitou reflexões críticas acerca do papel da Química e dos próprios estudantes na construção de uma sociedade sustentável
Química e arte para a eternidade : pinturas murais do Egito Antigo como proposta de Ensino de química valorizando a história da ciência
Este artigo apresenta resultados da aplicação de uma intervenção didático-pedagógica interdisciplinar para o Ensino de Química (EQ) através de perspectiva baseada na História da Ciência (HC), destacando-se a História da Química (HQ). Foi desenvolvido com alunos do Curso Médio Integrado ao Técnico em Química, no Instituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia de São Paulo. Este trabalho faz parte da pesquisa de mestrado em andamento e caracteriza-se pela abordagem qualitativa.Este projeto possibilitou articular Química, Arte e História de forma contextualizada e coerente com propostas vigentes nos documentos que organizam a educação brasileira
Differentials in death count records by databases in Brazil in 2010
OBJECTIVE To compare the death counts from three sources of information on mortality available in Brazil in 2010, the Mortality Information System (SIM - Sistema de Informações sobre Mortalidade ), Civil Registration Statistic System (RC - Sistema de Estatísticas de Resgistro Civil ), and the 2010 Demographic Census at various geographical levels, and to confirm the association between municipal socioeconomic characteristics and the source which showed the highest death count. METHODS This is a descriptive and comparative study of raw data on deaths in the SIM, RC and 2010 Census databases, the latter held in Brazilian states and municipalities between August 2009 and July 2010. The percentage of municipalities was confirmed by the database showing the highest death count. The association between the source of the highest death count and socioeconomic indicators - the Índice de Privação Brasileiro (IBP – Brazilian Deprivation Index) and Índice de Desenvolvimento Humano Municipal (IHDM – Municipal Human Development Index) - was performed by bivariate choropleth and Moran Local Index of Spatial Association (LISA) cluster maps. RESULTS Confirmed that the SIM is the database with the highest number of deaths counted for all Brazilian macroregions, except the North, in which the highest coverage was from the 2010 Census. Based on the indicators proposed, in general, the Census showed a higher coverage of deaths than the SIM and the RC in the most deprived (highest IBP values) and less developed municipalities (lowest IDHM values) in the country. CONCLUSION The results highlight regional inequalities in how the databases chosen for this study cover death records, and the importance of maintaining the issue of mortality on the basic census questionnaire
Mortality inequalities measured by socioeconomic indicators in Brazil: a scoping review
OBJECTIVE Summarize the literature on the relationship between composite socioeconomic indicators and mortality in different geographical areas of Brazil. METHODS This scoping review included articles published between January 1, 2000, and August 31, 2020, retrieved by means of a bibliographic search carried out in the Medline, Scopus, Web of Science, and Lilacs databases. Studies reporting on the association between composite socioeconomic indicators and all-cause, or specific cause of death in any age group in different geographical areas were selected. The review summarized the measures constructed, their associations with the outcomes, and potential study limitations. RESULTS Of the 77 full texts that met the inclusion criteria, the study reviewed 24. The area level of composite socioeconomic indicators analyzed comprised municipalities (n = 6), districts (n = 5), census tracts (n = 4), state (n = 2), country (n = 2), and other areas (n = 5). Six studies used composite socioeconomic indicators such as the Human Development Index, Gross Domestic Product, and the Gini Index; the remaining 18 papers created their own socioeconomic measures based on sociodemographic and health indicators. Socioeconomic status was inversely associated with higher rates of all-cause mortality, external cause mortality, suicide, homicide, fetal and infant mortality, respiratory and circulatory diseases, stroke, infectious and parasitic diseases, malnutrition, gastroenteritis, and oropharyngeal cancer. Higher mortality rates due to colorectal cancer, leukemia, a general group of neoplasms, traffic accident, and suicide, in turn, were observed in less deprived areas and/or those with more significant socioeconomic development. Underreporting of death and differences in mortality coverage in Brazilian areas were cited as the main limitation. CONCLUSIONS Studies analyzed mortality inequalities in different geographical areas by means of composite socioeconomic indicators, showing that the association directions vary according to the mortality outcome. But studies on all-cause mortality and at the census tract level remain scarce. The results may guide the development of new composite socioeconomic indicators for use in mortality inequality analysis
Rate-Induced Transitions in Networked Complex Adaptive Systems: Exploring Dynamics and Management Implications Across Ecological, Social, and Socioecological Systems
Complex adaptive systems (CASs), from ecosystems to economies, are open
systems and inherently dependent on external conditions. While a system can
transition from one state to another based on the magnitude of change in
external conditions, the rate of change -- irrespective of magnitude -- may
also lead to system state changes due to a phenomenon known as a rate-induced
transition (RIT). This study presents a novel framework that captures RITs in
CASs through a local model and a network extension where each node contributes
to the structural adaptability of others. Our findings reveal how RITs occur at
a critical environmental change rate, with lower-degree nodes tipping first due
to fewer connections and reduced adaptive capacity. High-degree nodes tip later
as their adaptability sources (lower-degree nodes) collapse. This pattern
persists across various network structures. Our study calls for an extended
perspective when managing CASs, emphasizing the need to focus not only on
thresholds of external conditions but also the rate at which those conditions
change, particularly in the context of the collapse of surrounding systems that
contribute to the focal system's resilience. Our analytical method opens a path
to designing management policies that mitigate RIT impacts and enhance
resilience in ecological, social, and socioecological systems. These policies
could include controlling environmental change rates, fostering system
adaptability, implementing adaptive management strategies, and building
capacity and knowledge exchange. Our study contributes to the understanding of
RIT dynamics and informs effective management strategies for complex adaptive
systems in the face of rapid environmental change.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, 1 box, supplementary informatio
Combined association of obesity and other cardiometabolic diseases with severe COVID-19 outcomes: a nationwide cross-sectional study of 21 773 Brazilian adult and elderly inpatients.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the combined association of obesity, diabetes mellitus (DM) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) with severe COVID-19 outcomes in adult and elderly inpatients. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study based on registry data from Brazil's influenza surveillance system. SETTING: Public and private hospitals across Brazil. PARTICIPANTS: Eligible population included 21 942 inpatients aged ≥20 years with positive reverse transcription-PCR test for SARS-CoV-2 until 9 June 2020. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Severe COVID-19 outcomes were non-invasive and invasive mechanical ventilation use, intensive care unit (ICU) admission and death. Multivariate analyses were conducted separately for adults (20-59 years) and elders (≥60 years) to test the combined association of obesity (without and with DM and/or CVD) and degrees of obesity with each outcome. RESULTS: A sample of 8848 adults and 12 925 elders were included. Among adults, obesity with DM and/or CVD showed higher prevalence of invasive (prevalence ratio 3.76, 95% CI 2.82 to 5.01) and non-invasive mechanical ventilation use (2.06, 1.58 to 2.69), ICU admission (1.60, 1.40 to 1.83) and death (1.79, 1.45 to 2.21) compared with the group without obesity, DM and CVD. In elders, obesity alone (without DM and CVD) had the highest prevalence of ICU admission (1.40, 1.07 to 1.82) and death (1.67, 1.00 to 2.80). In both age groups, obesity alone and combined with DM and/or CVD showed higher prevalence in all outcomes than DM and/or CVD. A dose-response association was observed between obesity and death in adults: class I 1.32 (1.05 to 1.66), class II 1.41 (1.06 to 1.87) and class III 1.77 (1.35 to 2.33). CONCLUSIONS: The combined association of obesity, diabetes and/or CVD with severe COVID-19 outcomes may be stronger in adults than in elders. Obesity alone and combined with DM and/or CVD had more impact on the risk of COVID-19 severity than DM and/or CVD in both age groups. The study also supports an independent relationship of obesity with severe outcomes, including a dose-response association between degrees of obesity and death in adults
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