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Sistema Único de Saúde

The Sistema Único de Saúde (Portuguese pronunciation: [sisˈtemɐ ˈuniku dʒi saˈudʒi], Unified Health System),[3] better known by the acronym SUS, is Brazil's publicly funded health care system. Created in 1990, the SUS is the largest government-run public health care system in the world, by number of beneficiaries/users (virtually 100% of the Brazilian population; 220 million people), land area coverage (3.3 million square miles), and affiliated network/number of treatment centers (over 50,000 clinics). The system is entirely free of any cost at the point of service for any person, including foreigners.

Sistema Único de Saúde
SUS logo
Publicly funded health service overview
Formed19 September 1990 (1990-09-19)[1]
JurisdictionBrazil
HeadquartersBrasília, Federal District
EmployeesCirca 1 million
Annual budgetR$ 41 billion (2024)[2]
Minister responsible
Parent departmentMinistry of Health
Websitemeususdigital.saude.gov.br

Creation edit

After the end of the military dictatorship that had ruled the country for 20 years from the 1960s to the 1980s, the 1988 Constitution of Brazil sought to guarantee more rights and freedoms to the population, and set many objectives of social development. Among those, improving health care was set as a priority:

Health is a right of all and an obligation of the State, guaranteed by socioeconomic policies which seek to the reduction of the risk of disease and of other grievances and to the universal and equal access to the actions and services in its promotion, protection and recuperation.[4]

Two years later on Wednesday, 19 September 1990, the objectives set in the constitution were consolidated in the letter of the law by the Federal Law Number 8.080, whose articles created the SUS and defined its actuation.[5] Prior to that, only people who contributed with the social security were able to receive health care. The creation of the SUS was important in that more than 80% of the Brazilian population depend on it to receive medical treatment. Brazil provides two-tier health care, and almost 25% of the population pay for private insurance.[6]

Objectives edit

 
Institute of Cancer of São Paulo
 
Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul Hospital complex in Porto Alegre
 
Oswaldo Cruz Foundation in Rio de Janeiro

The SUS's objectives are, by the law of its creation, defined as:[5]

  • The identification and publication of determinant and conditioning factors for human health;
  • The formulation of the health policy;
  • Assistance to the people through actions of promotion, protection and recuperation of health, with the integrated realization of assistance actions and preventive activities;
  • Sanitation and health surveillance;
  • Epidemiological vigilance;
  • Occupational safety and health;
  • Integral therapeutic assistance, including pharmaceutic;
  • Organization of the formation of health human resources;
  • Nutritional vigilance and orientation;
  • Collaboration with the protection of environment, including work environment;
  • Formulation of policies regarding drugs, equipment, immunobiologicals and other resources of interest for human health, and participation in its production;
  • The control and fiscalization of services, products e substances of interest for human health;
  • The fiscalization and inspection of food, water and beverages for human consumption;
  • The participation in the control and fiscalization of the production, transportation, safety and utilization of radioactive, toxic, and psychoactive substances and products;
  • Scientific and technological developments in its area of actuation;
  • The formulation and execution of the national policy for blood and its derivatives.

Constitutional principles edit

A closer look at the Health section, (of the Article 196 to the Article 198) of the Constitution, shows that five basic principles have been established that guide the legal system in relation to SUS. They are: universality (Article 196), integrality (Article 198-II), equity (Article 196 - "universal and equal access"), decentralization (Article 198-I) and social participation (Article 198-III).

Universality edit

This principle can be obtained from the definition of the Article 196, which considered health as a "right of all and duty of the State". Thus, the right to health is a fundamental right of any and all citizens, even being considered a clause set in stone, that is, it cannot be removed from the Constitution under any circumstances, as it constitutes an individual right and guarantee, according to the Section of the Legislative Process, the Article 60, the Paragraph 4, the Item IV.

Comprehensiveness edit

Completeness, according to the Article 198, in the Item II, confers on the State the duty of “comprehensive care, with priority for preventive activities, without prejudice to assistance services” in relation to the access that any and every citizen is entitled to. For this reason, the State must establish a set of actions that range from prevention to curative assistance, at the most diverse levels of complexity, as a way of implementing and guaranteeing the postulate of health.

“Man is an integral, biopsychosocial being, and he must be served with this integral vision by a health system that is also integral, aimed at promoting, protecting and restoring his health.”

Equity edit

The principle of equity is related to the constitutional mandate that “health is the right of all”, provided for in the aforementioned Article 196 of the Constitution. The aim here is to preserve the postulate of isonomy, since the Constitution itself, in Individual and Collective Rights and Duties, the Article 5, establishes that “all are equal before the law, without distinction of any kind”. Therefore, all citizens, equally, must have their health rights guaranteed by the State. However, regional and social inequalities can lead to the innocence of this isonomy, after all, a more needy area may demand more spending compared to others. For this reason, the State must treat "unequal unequals", concentrating its efforts and investments in territorial areas with the worst rates and deficits in the provision of public services.

Equal access (equity principle) does not mean that the SUS should treat everyone equally, but rather respect the rights of everyone, according to their differences, based more on the intimate conviction of natural justice than on the letter of the law.

Decentralization edit

It is established in Da Saúde, the Article 198, that “public health actions and services are part of a regionalized and hierarchical network and constitute a single system, organized according to the following guidelines: I - decentralization, with a single direction in each sphere of government [...] ”. For this reason, the Unified Health System is present at all federal levels — Union, States, Federal District and Municipalities — so that what falls within the scope of national coverage will be the responsibility of the Federal Government, which is related to the competence of a State must be under the responsibility of the State Government, and the same definition occurs with a Municipality. In this way, a greater dialogue is sought with the local civil society, which is closer to the manager, to ask him about the appropriate public policies.

Throughout the years, the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS) has undergone a significant decentralization process. This process has allowed greater participation in health care decision-making among the state, federal and municipal levels of government. Likewise, this has encouraged social participation in health policy legislation and increased accountability for providing health care services.[7]

Social participation edit

It is also foreseen in the same Article 198, the Item III, the “participation of the community” in the actions and public health services, acting in the formulation and in the control of their execution. Social control, as this principle is also called, was better regulated by the aforementioned Federal Law Number 8,142 of 1990. Users participate in the management of the SUS through the Health Conferences, which take place every four years at all federal levels - Union, States, Federal District and Municipalities. In Health Councils, there is a so-called parity: while users have half of the vacancies, the government has one room and workers another. Therefore, it seeks to encourage popular participation in the discussion of public health policies, giving greater legitimacy to the system and the actions implemented.

Nevertheless, it is observed that the Original Constituent of 1988 did not seek only to implement the public system of universal and free health in the country, in contrast to what existed in the military period, which favored only workers with a formal contract. It went further and also established principles that would guide the interpretation that the legal world and the spheres of government would make about the aforementioned system. And from the reading of these principles, the Constituent concern to reinforce the defense of the citizen before the State is noticed, guaranteeing means not only for the existence of the system, but also for the individual to have a voice to fight for its improvement and greater effectiveness.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "SUS completa 30 anos da criação". Casa Civil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2023-12-11.
  2. ^ "Saúde pública em 2024: investimentos prometem ser maiores". Saúde Business (in Brazilian Portuguese). 1 December 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2024.
  3. ^ Castro, Marcia C.; Massuda, Adriano; Almeida, Gisele; Menezes-Filho, Naercio Aquino; Andrade, Monica Viegas; De Souza Noronha, Kenya Valéria Micaela; Rocha, Rudi; MacInko, James; Hone, Thomas; Tasca, Renato; Giovanella, Ligia; Malik, Ana Maria; Werneck, Heitor; Fachini, Luiz Augusto; Atun, Rifat (2019). "Brazil's unified health system: The first 30 years and prospects for the future". The Lancet. 394 (10195): 345–356. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(19)31243-7. hdl:10044/1/70528. PMID 31303318. S2CID 195886916.
  4. ^ Brazilian Constitution of 1988
  5. ^ a b "L8080". www.planalto.gov.br. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  6. ^ brasil.gov.br "Planos de Saúde Privado" ("Planos de Saúde Privado")
  7. ^ Paim, Jairnilson; Travassos, Claudia; Almeida, Celia; Bahia, Ligia; Macinko, James (May 2011). "The Brazilian health system: history, advances, and challenges". The Lancet. 377 (9779): 1778–1797. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60054-8. PMID 21561655. S2CID 33366467.

External links edit

  • Health National Website (in english)
  • DataSUS official website
  • by Lenaura Lobato

sistema, Único, saúde, portuguese, pronunciation, sisˈtemɐ, ˈuniku, dʒi, saˈudʒi, unified, health, system, better, known, acronym, brazil, publicly, funded, health, care, system, created, 1990, largest, government, public, health, care, system, world, number, . The Sistema Unico de Saude Portuguese pronunciation sisˈtemɐ ˈuniku dʒi saˈudʒi Unified Health System 3 better known by the acronym SUS is Brazil s publicly funded health care system Created in 1990 the SUS is the largest government run public health care system in the world by number of beneficiaries users virtually 100 of the Brazilian population 220 million people land area coverage 3 3 million square miles and affiliated network number of treatment centers over 50 000 clinics The system is entirely free of any cost at the point of service for any person including foreigners Sistema Unico de SaudeSUS logoPublicly funded health service overviewFormed19 September 1990 1990 09 19 1 JurisdictionBrazilHeadquartersBrasilia Federal DistrictEmployeesCirca 1 millionAnnual budgetR 41 billion 2024 2 Minister responsibleNisia Trindade Minister of HealthParent departmentMinistry of HealthWebsitemeususdigital wbr saude wbr gov wbr br Contents 1 Creation 2 Objectives 3 Constitutional principles 3 1 Universality 3 2 Comprehensiveness 3 3 Equity 3 4 Decentralization 3 5 Social participation 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksCreation editAfter the end of the military dictatorship that had ruled the country for 20 years from the 1960s to the 1980s the 1988 Constitution of Brazil sought to guarantee more rights and freedoms to the population and set many objectives of social development Among those improving health care was set as a priority Health is a right of all and an obligation of the State guaranteed by socioeconomic policies which seek to the reduction of the risk of disease and of other grievances and to the universal and equal access to the actions and services in its promotion protection and recuperation 4 Two years later on Wednesday 19 September 1990 the objectives set in the constitution were consolidated in the letter of the law by the Federal Law Number 8 080 whose articles created the SUS and defined its actuation 5 Prior to that only people who contributed with the social security were able to receive health care The creation of the SUS was important in that more than 80 of the Brazilian population depend on it to receive medical treatment Brazil provides two tier health care and almost 25 of the population pay for private insurance 6 Objectives edit nbsp Institute of Cancer of Sao Paulo nbsp Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul Hospital complex in Porto Alegre nbsp Oswaldo Cruz Foundation in Rio de JaneiroThe SUS s objectives are by the law of its creation defined as 5 The identification and publication of determinant and conditioning factors for human health The formulation of the health policy Assistance to the people through actions of promotion protection and recuperation of health with the integrated realization of assistance actions and preventive activities Sanitation and health surveillance Epidemiological vigilance Occupational safety and health Integral therapeutic assistance including pharmaceutic Organization of the formation of health human resources Nutritional vigilance and orientation Collaboration with the protection of environment including work environment Formulation of policies regarding drugs equipment immunobiologicals and other resources of interest for human health and participation in its production The control and fiscalization of services products e substances of interest for human health The fiscalization and inspection of food water and beverages for human consumption The participation in the control and fiscalization of the production transportation safety and utilization of radioactive toxic and psychoactive substances and products Scientific and technological developments in its area of actuation The formulation and execution of the national policy for blood and its derivatives Constitutional principles editA closer look at the Health section of the Article 196 to the Article 198 of the Constitution shows that five basic principles have been established that guide the legal system in relation to SUS They are universality Article 196 integrality Article 198 II equity Article 196 universal and equal access decentralization Article 198 I and social participation Article 198 III Universality edit This principle can be obtained from the definition of the Article 196 which considered health as a right of all and duty of the State Thus the right to health is a fundamental right of any and all citizens even being considered a clause set in stone that is it cannot be removed from the Constitution under any circumstances as it constitutes an individual right and guarantee according to the Section of the Legislative Process the Article 60 the Paragraph 4 the Item IV Comprehensiveness edit Completeness according to the Article 198 in the Item II confers on the State the duty of comprehensive care with priority for preventive activities without prejudice to assistance services in relation to the access that any and every citizen is entitled to For this reason the State must establish a set of actions that range from prevention to curative assistance at the most diverse levels of complexity as a way of implementing and guaranteeing the postulate of health Man is an integral biopsychosocial being and he must be served with this integral vision by a health system that is also integral aimed at promoting protecting and restoring his health Equity edit The principle of equity is related to the constitutional mandate that health is the right of all provided for in the aforementioned Article 196 of the Constitution The aim here is to preserve the postulate of isonomy since the Constitution itself in Individual and Collective Rights and Duties the Article 5 establishes that all are equal before the law without distinction of any kind Therefore all citizens equally must have their health rights guaranteed by the State However regional and social inequalities can lead to the innocence of this isonomy after all a more needy area may demand more spending compared to others For this reason the State must treat unequal unequals concentrating its efforts and investments in territorial areas with the worst rates and deficits in the provision of public services Equal access equity principle does not mean that the SUS should treat everyone equally but rather respect the rights of everyone according to their differences based more on the intimate conviction of natural justice than on the letter of the law Decentralization edit It is established in Da Saude the Article 198 that public health actions and services are part of a regionalized and hierarchical network and constitute a single system organized according to the following guidelines I decentralization with a single direction in each sphere of government For this reason the Unified Health System is present at all federal levels Union States Federal District and Municipalities so that what falls within the scope of national coverage will be the responsibility of the Federal Government which is related to the competence of a State must be under the responsibility of the State Government and the same definition occurs with a Municipality In this way a greater dialogue is sought with the local civil society which is closer to the manager to ask him about the appropriate public policies Throughout the years the Brazilian Unified Health System SUS has undergone a significant decentralization process This process has allowed greater participation in health care decision making among the state federal and municipal levels of government Likewise this has encouraged social participation in health policy legislation and increased accountability for providing health care services 7 Social participation edit It is also foreseen in the same Article 198 the Item III the participation of the community in the actions and public health services acting in the formulation and in the control of their execution Social control as this principle is also called was better regulated by the aforementioned Federal Law Number 8 142 of 1990 Users participate in the management of the SUS through the Health Conferences which take place every four years at all federal levels Union States Federal District and Municipalities In Health Councils there is a so called parity while users have half of the vacancies the government has one room and workers another Therefore it seeks to encourage popular participation in the discussion of public health policies giving greater legitimacy to the system and the actions implemented Nevertheless it is observed that the Original Constituent of 1988 did not seek only to implement the public system of universal and free health in the country in contrast to what existed in the military period which favored only workers with a formal contract It went further and also established principles that would guide the interpretation that the legal world and the spheres of government would make about the aforementioned system And from the reading of these principles the Constituent concern to reinforce the defense of the citizen before the State is noticed guaranteeing means not only for the existence of the system but also for the individual to have a voice to fight for its improvement and greater effectiveness See also editHealth in Brazil Healthcare in BrazilReferences edit SUS completa 30 anos da criacao Casa Civil in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 2023 12 11 Saude publica em 2024 investimentos prometem ser maiores Saude Business in Brazilian Portuguese 1 December 2023 Retrieved 21 January 2024 Castro Marcia C Massuda Adriano Almeida Gisele Menezes Filho Naercio Aquino Andrade Monica Viegas De Souza Noronha Kenya Valeria Micaela Rocha Rudi MacInko James Hone Thomas Tasca Renato Giovanella Ligia Malik Ana Maria Werneck Heitor Fachini Luiz Augusto Atun Rifat 2019 Brazil s unified health system The first 30 years and prospects for the future The Lancet 394 10195 345 356 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 19 31243 7 hdl 10044 1 70528 PMID 31303318 S2CID 195886916 Brazilian Constitution of 1988 a b L8080 www planalto gov br Retrieved 2019 09 25 brasil gov br Planos de Saude Privado Planos de Saude Privado Paim Jairnilson Travassos Claudia Almeida Celia Bahia Ligia Macinko James May 2011 The Brazilian health system history advances and challenges The Lancet 377 9779 1778 1797 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 11 60054 8 PMID 21561655 S2CID 33366467 External links editHealth National Website in english DataSUS official website Reorganizing the Health Care System in Brazil by Lenaura Lobato Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sistema Unico de Saude amp oldid 1197671961, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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