Title of article
Social medicine in Latin America: productivity and dangers facing the major national groups
Author/Authors
Howard Waitzkin، نويسنده , , Celia Iriart، نويسنده , , Alfredo Estrada، نويسنده , , Silvia Lamadrid، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
9
From page
315
To page
323
Abstract
There is little knowledge about Latin American social medicine in the English-speaking world. Social medicine groups exist in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, and Mexico. Dictatorships have created political and economic conditions which are more adverse in some countries than others; in certain instances, practitioners of social medicine have faced unemployment, arrest, torture, exile, and death. Social medicine groups have focused on the social determinants of illness and early death, the effects of social policies such as privatisation and public sector cutbacks, occupational and environmental causes of illness, critical epidemiology, mental health effects of political trauma, the impact of gender, and collaborations with local communities, labour organisations, and indigenous people. The groupsʹ achievements and financial survival have varied, depending partly on the national context. Active professional associations have developed, both nationally and internationally. Several groups have achieved publication in journals and books, despite financial and technical difficulties that might be lessened through a new initiative sponsored by the US National Library of Medicine. The conceptual orientation and research efforts of these groups have tended to challenge current relations of economic and political power. Despite its dangers, Latin American social medicine has emerged as a productive field of work, whose findings have become pertinent throughout the world.
Journal title
The Lancet
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
The Lancet
Record number
565708
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