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Spectrum of Disease Burden in Urban Informal Settlements of Brazil.

机译:巴西城市非正式住区的疾病负担谱。

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摘要

There are more than one billion urban informal slum residents worldwide, comprising almost one-third of the global urban population. Slums are characterized by their abundance of risk factors for communicable and non-communicable diseases. Some of these include poor water and sanitation infrastructure, in addition to poor structural housing quality, overcrowding and insecure residential status (i.e. lack of land tenure). Residents of these communities shoulder a greater burden of biologic, spatial and social health determinants of disease and their corresponding disease outcomes than residents of the same city who do not live in slums. Due to systematic disenfranchisement and the complicated logistics involved in studying these populations, our knowledge about their health conditions and determinants of disease occurrence is sparse. This dissertation describes three approaches to begin to address this gap in knowledge.;Chapter 1 sets the tone for this dissertation by describing the concept of slums and lays out the evidence for the disproportionate burden of disease borne by slum residents. While not being representative of all slums worldwide---Brazil is now considered an upper-middle-income country by the World Bank---the country's slums serve as an important case study. Brazil has a relatively robust healthcare system, a functional democracy, and an active research sector, all of which facilitate the collection and comparison of data inside and outside of the country's slums. Estimates of Brazil's slum population range from 11,425,644 (6% of the total population) in the 2010 Brazilian Census (the official government estimate) to 45.7 million (28%) estimated by the United Nations Human Settlements Program. In 2010, the Brazilian government carried out a census with the goal of systematically enumerating and describing the physical and demographic characteristics of the country's slums, coining the technical term aglomerados subnormais (AGSN) to describe slums.;Perhaps the most recognizable of all slums in Brazil are the favelas of Rio de Janeiro; these architecturally colorful and culturally vibrant communities accentuate the city's magnificent physical geography and beauty. Unfortunately, due to their precarious physical location, the quasi-legal land tenure of slum residents, the blatant political corruption, and the persistently poor implementation of the national healthcare system (in 2010 approximately 50% of Rio de Janeiro's population had access to the Sistema Unico de Saude---SUS), these communities' residents suffer from stark health inequalities. Chapter 2 uses the 2010 Census to describe the spatial distribution of social determinants of health in Rio de Janeiro. The findings from this analysis highlight differences in age, income, and access to electricity, sanitation, water, and solid waste disposal throughout the city, and point to the possibility that differences in these characteristics contribute to an inequitable distribution of disease between the city's slum and non-slum areas.;Chapter 3 delves more deeply into these inequalities. Given our group's previously published evidence suggesting that the burden of tuberculosis is greater among residents of Rio de Janeiro's slums than among residents of non-slum areas, we seek to fulfill a principle public health axiom: that we must seek and apply solutions to improve the health of populations. Chapter 3 evaluates the effectiveness of the directly observed treatment (DOT) program for tuberculosis treatment outcomes among TB cases inside and outside of Rio de Janeiro's slums. Using the Brazilian Notifiable Disease System, Sistema de Informacao de Agravos de Notificacao (SINAN), we compare treatment outcomes between TB cases on DOT in AGSN and non-AGSN census tracts. While we found that DOT coverage was low inside and outside of AGSNs, we report that DOT had a greater impact on the cure rate for TB cases in AGSN areas compared to TB cases in non-AGSN areas. Chapter 4 shifts the lens to non-communicable diseases (NCD) and to a different city, Salvador, where thirty-three percent of the population lives in slums. We compare the burden of several NCD (i.e. diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia) and the prevalence of risk factors (i.e. overweight, obesity and smoking) in a convenience sample of residents of Pau da Lima, an urban slum, with residents of the entire city as captured in a telephone survey. This telephone survey is an annual landline-based survey undertaken by the Brazilian Ministry of Health with the express purpose of monitoring the prevalences of NCD and NCD risk factors in Brazil's capital cities. We age- and sex- standardized the prevalences of these conditions and risk factors and compared them between these two populations. We found that the age- and sex-adjusted prevalences of diabetes mellitus, smoking, being overweight/obese, and being obese, were higher among residents of Pau da Lima than in residents of the entire city of Salvador. A striking finding was that women living in slums suffered a disproportionate burden of being overweight or obese, and men in slums smoked at almost twice the frequency as men in the city as a whole.;While these observational studies and analyses do not provide causal evidence for a link between slum residence and adverse health outcomes, they provide preliminary data in support of the hypothesis that residents of slums in several major Brazilian cities have unique social and spatial determinants of health, and subsequently distinct disease profiles, compared to residents of non-slum neighborhoods in the same city.;Because of poor access to healthcare and a host of other slum-specific obstacles, slum residents rarely appear in official disease or mortality estimates. Consequently, slum-specific analyses such as those presented in this dissertation that describe the burden of disease among slum residents can be used to design policies aimed at mitigating the inequitable distribution of disease in these communities, also serving as a baseline to evaluate the impact of these policies on the health of this population. The findings from this dissertation should be used to encourage further epidemiologic analyses of slum populations, not only in Brazil, but also among slum populations of megacities elsewhere in the world.
机译:全世界有超过十亿的城市非正式贫民窟居民,几乎占全球城市人口的三分之一。贫民窟的特征是其丰富的传染病和非传染病危险因素。其中一些包括不良的水和卫生基础设施,以及结构性住房质量差,人满为患和不安全的居住状况(即缺乏土地使用权)。与不住在贫民窟的同一城市的居民相比,这些社区的居民承担着疾病的生物学,空间和社会健康决定因素及其相应疾病后果的负担。由于系统剥夺公民权和研究这些人群的复杂后勤工作,我们对他们的健康状况和疾病发生的决定因素的了解很少。本文介绍了三种解决知识鸿沟的方法。第一章通过描述贫民窟的概念为这一论文定下基调,并为贫民窟居民所承受的疾病负担过重提供了证据。尽管不能代表全世界的所有贫民窟-世界银行将巴西视为当今的中上收入国家,但该国的贫民窟却是一个重要的案例研究。巴西拥有相对健全的医疗体系,功能性民主国家和活跃的研究部门,所有这些都促进了该国贫民窟内外的数据收集和比较。巴西的贫民窟人口估计范围从2010年巴西人口普查中的11,425,644(占总人口的6%)(官方政府估计)到联合国人类住区规划署估计的4,570万(28%)不等。 2010年,巴西政府进行了一次人口普查,目标是系统地枚举和描述该国贫民窟的自然和人口特征,创造了术语Aglomerados subnormais(AGSN)来描述贫民窟;也许这是该地区所有贫民窟中最知名的巴西是里约热内卢的最爱。这些建筑丰富多彩,文化活跃的社区突显了这座城市壮丽的自然地理和美丽风光。不幸的是,由于地理位置的不稳定,贫民窟居民的准法律土地使用权,公然的政治腐败以及国家医疗保健系统的持续执行不力(2010年,里约热内卢约50%的人口可以使用Sistema) Unico de Saude --- SUS),这些社区的居民遭受着严重的健康不平等。第2章使用2010年人口普查描述里约热内卢健康问题社会决定因素的空间分布。该分析的结果突出了整个城市的年龄,收入以及获得电力,卫生设施,水和固体废物的途径的差异,并指出这些特征的差异可能导致城市贫民窟之间的疾病分布不均和非贫民区。第三章深入研究了这些不平等现象。鉴于我们小组先前发表的证据表明,里约热内卢贫民窟居民的结核病负担要比非贫民窟地区居民的结核病负担更大,因此,我们力求实现一项基本的公共卫生原则:我们必须寻求并采用解决方案,以改善人口健康。第3章评估了里约热内卢贫民窟内外结核病病例中直接观察治疗(DOT)计划对结核病治疗结果的有效性。我们使用巴西法定传染病系统(SNAN),在AGSN和非AGSN人口普查区比较DOT上的TB病例的治疗结果。虽然我们发现DOT在AGSN内部和外部的覆盖率很低,但我们报告DOT对AGSN地区TB病例治愈率的影响要大于非AGSN地区的TB病例。第4章将目光投向了非传染性疾病(NCD)和另一个城市萨尔瓦多,那里有33%的人口居住在贫民窟。我们在城市贫民窟波达利马(Pau da Lima)居民的便利样本中,与整个居民进行了比较,比较了几种非传染性疾病的负担(即糖尿病,高血压,血脂异常)和危险因素(即超重,肥胖和吸烟)的患病率电话调查中捕获的城市。这项电话调查是由巴西卫生部进行的年度固定电话调查,其明确目的是监视巴西首都城市的非传染性疾病和非传染性疾病危险因素的患病率。我们通过年龄和性别标准化了这些疾病和危险因素的患病率,并在这两个人群之间进行了比较。我们发现,按年龄和性别调整的糖尿病患病率,吸烟,超重/肥胖和肥胖,波达利马(Pau da Lima)居民的收入高于整个萨尔瓦多市的居民。一个令人惊讶的发现是,贫民窟中的女性超重或肥胖负担过重,而贫民窟中的男性吸烟频率几乎是整个城市男性的两倍。尽管这些观察性研究和分析没有提供因果关系的证据为了将贫民窟居民与不良健康后果联系起来,他们提供了初步数据,以支持以下假设:与其他非巴西居民相比,巴西几个主要城市的贫民窟居民具有独特的健康社会和空间决定因素,因此具有独特的疾病特征同一城市中的贫民窟居民区;由于无法获得医疗保健和许多其他贫民窟特定障碍,贫民窟居民很少出现在官方疾病或死亡率估计中。因此,本论文中描述贫民窟居民疾病负担的针对贫民窟的特定分析可用于设计旨在减轻这些社区中疾病的不公平分布的政策,也可作为评估贫困人口影响的基准这些政策对这个人口的健康。这篇论文的发现应该被用来鼓励对贫民窟人口进行进一步的流行病学分析,不仅是在巴西,而且是在世界其他地方的特大城市的贫民窟人口中。

著录项

  • 作者

    Snyder, Robert Eugene.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Berkeley.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Berkeley.;
  • 学科 Epidemiology.;Public health.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2016
  • 页码 81 p.
  • 总页数 81
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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