One Year of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Brazil: A Political and Social Overview

被引:55
|
作者
Boschiero, Matheus Negri [1 ]
Capasso Palamim, Camila Vantini [1 ,2 ]
Ortega, Manoela Marques [1 ,2 ]
Mauch, Renan Marrichi [3 ]
Lima Marson, Fernando Augusto [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Sao Francisco Univ, Lab Cell & Mol Tumor Biol & Bioact Cpds, Braganca Paulista, SP, Brazil
[2] Sao Francisco Univ, Lab Human & Med Genet, Braganca Paulista, SP, Brazil
[3] Univ Estadual Campinas, Sch Med Sci, Ctr Invest Pediat, Lab Translat Med, Campinas, SP, Brazil
来源
ANNALS OF GLOBAL HEALTH | 2021年 / 87卷 / 01期
关键词
EFFICACY;
D O I
10.5334/aogh.3182
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) became the deadliest pandemic of the new millennium. One year after it became a pandemic, the current COVID-19 situation in Brazil is an example of how the impacts of a pandemic are beyond health outcomes and how health, social, and political actions are intertwined. Objectives: We aimed to provide an overview of the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil, from a social and political point of view, and to discuss the perspectives from now on. Methods: This is a narrative review using official, scientific (PubMed, Medline, and SciELO databases) and publicly available data. Press articles were also used that contain important information not found in these databases. Findings: We address the impacts of COVID-19 in different regions of Brazil, on indigenous populations, health care workers, and how internal social contrasts impacted the pandemic's advance across the country. We also discuss key points that culminated in the country's failed management of the COVID-19 spread, such as poor management of the public health care system, disparities between public and private health care infrastructure, lack of mass testing and viral spread tracking, lack of preparedness and planning to implement strict isolation and social distancing measures, and, most importantly, political instability, a deteriorating Health Ministry and sabotaging attitudes of the country's president, including anti-scientific actions, underplaying COVID-19 severity, spreading and powering fake news about the pandemic, promoting knowingly inefficient medications for COVID-19 treatment, and interference in collective health policies, including the country's vaccination plan. Conclusions: After one year of COVID-19 and a disastrous management of the disease, Brazil has more than 11 million cases, 270,000 deaths, and the highest number of daily deaths due to COVID-19 in the world, most of which could have been avoided and can be credited to negligence of municipal, state, and federal authorities, especially President Jair Messias Bolsonaro. Unfortunately, the country is an example of what not to do in a pandemic setting.
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页数:27
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