Santos Alícia Patrine Cacau, Silva Evellyn Antonieta Rondon Tomé, Gama Hiran Sátiro Souza da, Cordeiro Jady Shayenne Mota, Oliveira Ana Paula Silva, Araújo Jéssica Albuquerque, Dávila Rafaela Nunes, Amazonas Júnior Hélio Afonso, Farias Altair Seabra, Sachett Jacqueline Almeida Gonçalves, Machado Vinícius Azevedo, Monteiro Wuelton Marcelo, Murta Felipe Leão Gomes
Fundação de Medicina Tropical Dr. Heitor Vieira Dourado, Manaus, Brazil.
Universidade do Estado do Amazonas, Manaus, Brazil.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2025 Jan 23;19(1):e0012840. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0012840. eCollection 2025 Jan.
Riverine communities face various health problems, which involve geographical and cultural barriers to accessing care, in addition to a lack of financial investments in services aimed at these communities, resulting in a process of invisibility for the population living in these regions. In this scenario, the significant burden of snakebite envenoming (SBE) highlights the need for participatory research to address ways to minimize this situation. Thus, this study aimed to describe the priority health problems identified by this population and the ranking of SBEs in that context, mapping solutions according to the local reality.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: This study was conducted in Limeira, a riverine community located in Tabatinga, in the extreme Western Brazilian Amazonia, on the borders with Peru and Colombia. The research lasted approximately one year, from 2021 to 2022.It is a participatory study that followed three steps: baseline assessment of the community, community assembly, and final data analysis. The study included a total of 42 participants in the sociodemographic survey, which served as the basis for the subsequent stages of data collection. Of these 42 individuals, 32 participated in the qualitative interviews, and 20 took part in the community assembly. Participants emphasized snakebite envenoming as a significant health issue, though not the only one, and reported frequent encounters with snakes, underscoring its severity as a concern. The qualitative analysis identified three main themes: Snakebites in the Community, which focused on personal experiences with snakes; Common Health Problems, which addressed other health issues faced by community members; and Community Defining Solutions, which discussed strategies and solutions proposed by the community to address these challenges.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Improvements in health care delivery to populations living in Amazonian communities are possible with the judicious use of tested integrated interventions, particularly when the community identifies various concurrent health problems. SBE control programs in remote areas of the Brazilian Amazon should be planned with a multidisciplinary and intercultural approach, preferably integrated with broader interventions that address the population's needs for a range of health issues.
河滨社区面临各种健康问题,除了对针对这些社区的服务缺乏财政投资外,还存在获取医疗服务的地理和文化障碍,导致这些地区居民的状况被忽视。在这种情况下,蛇咬伤中毒(SBE)的沉重负担凸显了开展参与性研究以探讨如何尽量减少这种情况的必要性。因此,本研究旨在描述该人群确定的优先健康问题以及在此背景下蛇咬伤中毒的排名,并根据当地实际情况制定解决方案。
方法/主要发现:本研究在位于巴西亚马逊地区最西部塔巴廷加的河滨社区利梅拉进行,该社区与秘鲁和哥伦比亚接壤。研究从2021年持续到2022年,历时约一年。这是一项参与性研究,分三个步骤进行:社区基线评估、社区集会和最终数据分析。社会人口学调查共纳入42名参与者,为后续数据收集阶段提供了基础。在这42人中,32人参与了定性访谈,20人参加了社区集会。参与者强调蛇咬伤中毒是一个重大的健康问题,尽管不是唯一的问题,并报告经常遇到蛇,凸显了其作为一个关切问题的严重性。定性分析确定了三个主要主题:社区中的蛇咬伤,重点是个人与蛇的经历;常见健康问题,涉及社区成员面临的其他健康问题;社区确定解决方案,讨论社区提出的应对这些挑战的策略和解决方案。
结论/意义:通过明智地使用经过检验的综合干预措施,有可能改善向亚马逊社区居民提供的医疗服务,特别是当社区识别出各种并发的健康问题时。巴西亚马逊偏远地区的蛇咬伤中毒控制项目应采用多学科和跨文化方法进行规划,最好与解决该人群一系列健康问题需求的更广泛干预措施相结合。