Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse
Oswaldo Cruz Foundation
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Featured researches published by Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse.
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2001
Annick Fontbonne; Eduardo Freese-de-Carvalho; Moab Duarte Acioli; Geisa Amorim de Sá; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse
An investigation into the ethno-epidemiological profile of the Pankararu indigenous group in the State of Pernambuco, Brazil, identified multiple intestinal parasites in nearly all members of the community. To detect possible environmental risk factors, we used the data base from a previous survey to test relations between daily living conditions (housing, sanitation, water supply and treatment, and garbage disposal) and the number of different parasite species found in the same household. The sample consisted of 84 families from the original sample of 112. Selection was based on the number of stool tests performed in the family. The mean number of parasite species was 5.0 per family, for a mean family size of 6.1 members. This number was greater for wattle-and-daub houses (mean 6.0 parasite species vs. 4.9 for brick houses; p < 0.03) and when water used in the household was not treated (mean 5.1 parasite species, vs. 4.5 for treated water; p < 0.05). Other household characteristics and hygienic habits did not significantly influence this number. We concluded that multiple intestinal parasitism in the Pernambuco Pankararu community is frequent, to the point of being the rule, and that it relates essentially to water source and treatment.
Revista Brasileira de Saúde Materno Infantil | 2001
Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse; Eduardo Maia Freese de Carvalho; Paulo Paes de Andrade; Walter Massa Ramalho; Luciano Luna
OBJECTIVES: the aim of this study was to verify certain processes that are related to the occupation of urban areas and which contribute to the occurrence and expansion of kala-azar in a medium-sized town undergoing economic growth with a high influx of migrants. METHODS: the study is an epidemiological cross-section, in which house-to-house investigation was conducted concerning cases registered in 8 districts and their respective census areas, all in the municipality of Petrolina, Pernambuco state, Brazil, from 1992 to 1997. The study was backed up by laboratory research, taking into consideration both the transmitter and animal reservoir. An explanatory social determination model for the health-illness process of this endemic-epidemic situation was used. RESULTS: a concentration of kala-azar cases was observed in the urban periphery of the town of Petrolina, in areas of squatter settlement and growth, where basic sanitation was precarious, in which animals and the vector were present around the household and the population had a low level of schooling. Males and the 0-4 age group were the most affected. CONCLUSIONS: the findings suggest the establishment of a new epidemiological pattern for kala-azar in Petrolina, where this endemic occurs in areas that have been highly modified by the population. Such a situation characterises the ruralisation process of the urban peripheries endemic in large cities.
JMIR public health and surveillance | 2017
Onicio Batista Leal Neto; George Santiago Dimech; Marlo Libel; Wayner Vieira de Souza; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse; Mark Smolinski; Wanderson Kleber de Oliveira; Jones Albuquerque
Background The 2005 International Health Regulations (IHRs) established parameters for event assessments and notifications that may constitute public health emergencies of international concern. These requirements and parameters opened up space for the use of nonofficial mechanisms (such as websites, blogs, and social networks) and technological improvements of communication that can streamline the detection, monitoring, and response to health problems, and thus reduce damage caused by these problems. Specifically, the revised IHR created space for participatory surveillance to function, in addition to the traditional surveillance mechanisms of detection, monitoring, and response. Participatory surveillance is based on crowdsourcing methods that collect information from society and then return the collective knowledge gained from that information back to society. The spread of digital social networks and wiki-style knowledge platforms has created a very favorable environment for this model of production and social control of information. Objective The aim of this study was to describe the use of a participatory surveillance app, Healthy Cup, for the early detection of acute disease outbreaks during the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World Cup 2014. Our focus was on three specific syndromes (respiratory, diarrheal, and rash) related to six diseases that were considered important in a mass gathering context (influenza, measles, rubella, cholera, acute diarrhea, and dengue fever). Methods From May 12 to July 13, 2014, users from anywhere in the world were able to download the Healthy Cup app and record their health condition, reporting whether they were good, very good, ill, or very ill. For users that reported being ill or very ill, a screen with a list of 10 symptoms was displayed. Participatory surveillance allows for the real-time identification of aggregates of symptoms that indicate possible cases of infectious diseases. Results From May 12 through July 13, 2014, there were 9434 downloads of the Healthy Cup app and 7155 (75.84%) registered users. Among the registered users, 4706 (4706/7155, 65.77%) were active users who posted a total of 47,879 times during the study period. The maximum number of users that signed up in one day occurred on May 30, 2014, the day that the app was officially launched by the Minister of Health during a press conference. During this event, the Minister of Health announced the special government program Health in the World Cup on national television media. On that date, 3633 logins were recorded, which accounted for more than half of all sign-ups across the entire duration of the study (50.78%, 3633/7155). Conclusions Participatory surveillance through community engagement is an innovative way to conduct epidemiological surveillance. Compared to traditional epidemiological surveillance, advantages include lower costs of data acquisition, timeliness of information collected and shared, platform scalability, and capacity for integration between the population being served and public health services.
Ciencia & Saude Coletiva | 2018
Hillegonda Maria Dutilh Novaes; Guilherme Loureiro Werneck; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse; Moisés Goldbaum; Maria Cecília de Souza Minayo
This article deals with a public policy in education, Post Graduation in Collective Health, to identify forms of dialogue of this policy, with the public health policy, the SUS, starting in 1990. The main product of PGSC policy is the training of masters and doctors, essential for teaching and research in the field. Bibliographic review and analysis of CAPES documents and databases based the analysis. Education policy was consistent over time and core to social development, alongside health policy, without presenting formal points of intercession, and its impacts occur mainly through the formation of good and committed professionals, teachers and researchers. In PGSC, professional masters programs are more relevant, for a more direct link of postgraduate programs with the SUS, and the initiatives of the Ministry of Health to finance priorities in research for the Health System. Even ininitiatives that explicitly seek to approximate the knowledge produced by PG with praxis in the SUS, the mechanisms involved in translating or impacting scientific knowledge into concrete practice are complex and must be context specific andthematic.This article deals with a public policy in education, Post Graduation in Collective Health, to identify forms of dialogue of this policy, with the public health policy, the SUS, starting in 1990. The main product of PGSC policy is the training of masters and doctors, essential for teaching and research in the field. Bibliographic review and analysis of CAPES documents and databases based the analysis. Education policy was consistent over time and core to social development, alongside health policy, without presenting formal points of intercession, and its impacts occur mainly through the formation of good and committed professionals, teachers and researchers. In PGSC, professional masters programs are more relevant, for a more direct link of postgraduate programs with the SUS, and the initiatives of the Ministry of Health to finance priorities in research for the Health System. Even ininitiatives that explicitly seek to approximate the knowledge produced by PG with praxis in the SUS, the mechanisms involved in translating or impacting scientific knowledge into concrete practice are complex and must be context specific andthematic.
Primary Care Diabetes | 2017
Jessyka Mary Vasconcelos Barbosa; Wayner Vieira de Souza; Renan Williams Marques Ferreira; Eduardo Freese de Carvalho; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse; Annick Fontbonne
AIMS The aim of this study was to determine correlates of physical activity (PA) counseling by health providers of the Brazilian primary care delivery system, for hypertensive and diabetic subjects, as well as correlates of actual leisure-time PA of these subjects. METHODS This was a cross-sectional study conducted in random samples of 785 hypertensive and 822 diabetic subjects, in the State of Pernambuco, Brazil. Relationships between PA counseling and leisure-time PA and explanatory variables were sought through multiple logistic regressions. RESULTS PA counseling had been received by 59.4% of the diabetic and 53.0% of the hypertensive subjects; around 30% of the diabetic and the hypertensive subjects declared having leisure-time PA. After adjustment, factors associated with PA counseling for diabetic subjects were: female gender, formal schooling, hypertension, obesity; for hypertensive subjects: being on a weight-loss diet, age between 60 and 74 and over 75. For both subject groups, leisure-time PA was more frequent when they lived in a medium-sized municipality, were female, aged between 60 and 75, and on a weight-loss diet. CONCLUSION PA counseling appeared restricted to subjects with excess weight and/or cardiovascular risk factors when it should be directed to all subjects with hypertension or diabetes.
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 1998
Eduardo Maia Freese de Carvalho; Moab Duarte Acioli; Maria Alice Fernandes Branco; André Monteiro Costa; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse; Antonieta G. de Andrade; Elda de M. L. e Mello
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2012
Ana Cláudia Figueiró; Zulmira Maria de Araújo Hartz; Isabella Samico; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse
Primary Care Diabetes | 2017
Michelly Geórgia da Silva Marinho; Annick Fontbonne; Jessyka Mary Vasconcelos Barbosa; Heloisa de Melo Rodrigues; Eduardo Freese de Carvalho; Wayner Vieira de Souza; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2017
Onicio Batista Leal Neto; Jones Albuquerque; Wayner Vieira de Souza; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse; Oswaldo Gonçalvez Cruz
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2017
Onicio Batista Leal Neto; Jones Albuquerque; Oswaldo Gonçalvez Cruz; Eduarda Angela Pessoa Cesse; Wayner Vieira de Souza