23 results
Search Results
2. On the Judicialization of Health and Access to Medicines in Latin America.
- Author
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Rama, Martín, Vargas, Verónica, Iunes, Roberto, and Guerra Junior, Augusto Afonso
- Subjects
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HEALTH services accessibility laws , *DRUG laws , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *MEDICAL laws , *HUMAN rights , *UNIVERSAL healthcare , *MEDICAL care costs , *QUALITY of life , *PROFESSIONAL autonomy , *LEGAL procedure , *PHYSICIANS , *DECISION making in clinical medicine - Abstract
In a context of rapid technological innovation and expensive new products, the paper calls for the generation of real-world data to inform decision-making and an international discussion on the affordability of new medicines, particularly for low- and middle-income countries. Without these, the challenges of health judicialization will continue to grow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Health Care in a Changing Climate: A Review of Climate Change Laws and National Adaptation Plans in Latin America.
- Author
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VIVEROS-UEHARA, THALIA
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MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH policy ,HUMAN rights ,MEDICAL care ,RIGHT to health ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Given that the health-related impacts of climate change in Latin America disproportionately affect the most marginalized sections of the population, there is a need to enhance countries' adaptive capacity through improved health systems. Though public health institutions have delineated guidelines to enhance health care systems' preparedness for climate change, embedding a human rights perspective in their translation into laws and policies further adds important value. Crucially, a rights-based approach strengthens health responses to climate change by calling attention to how climate law and policy fail to account for persistent and interlocking socioeconomic inequalities. This is an area that has not been fully present in the provision of health services in Latin America, which rely almost exclusively on a conventional epidemiological perspective and do not consider the historical and sociocultural nature of health challenges. Hence, this paper draws on two case studies--Brazil and Colombia--to identify the extent to which their national climate change laws and adaptation plans incorporate a human rightsbased approach in their tasks to enhance their adaptive capacity through the expansion of affordable and quality health care. With respect to the countries' laws, the absence of explicit references to the right to health exemplifies the fragmentation between the international human rights framework and international climate change law. Further, both countries' adaptation plans hold considerable room for improving their engagement with the human rights framework, particularly by establishing mechanisms to promote transparency, monitoring, and the participation of marginalized groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
4. Implementing community based inclusive development for people with disability in Latin America: a mixed methods perspective on prioritized needs and lessons learned.
- Author
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Bachfischer, Andreas, Barbosa, Martha Cecilia, Rojas, Angel Alberto Riveras, Bechler, Reinaldo, Schwienhorst-Stich, Eva-Maria, Kasang, Christa, Simmenroth, Anne, and Parisi, Sandra
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SELF advocacy ,FOCUS groups ,PATIENT participation ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,COMMUNITY life ,SOCIAL support ,RESEARCH methodology ,SELF-perception ,LEADERSHIP ,SOCIAL networks ,COMMUNITY health services ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,HOUSING stability ,HUMAN services programs ,MAPS ,SURVEYS ,QUALITATIVE research ,SELF-efficacy ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,NEEDS assessment ,REHABILITATION ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,THEMATIC analysis ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Background: Research on the needs of people with disability is scarce, which promotes inadequate programs. Community Based Inclusive Development interventions aim to promote rights but demand a high level of community participation. This study aimed to identify prioritized needs as well as lessons learned for successful project implementation in different Latin American communities. Methods: This study was based on a Community Based Inclusive Development project conducted from 2018 to 2021 led by a Columbian team in Columbia, Brazil and Bolivia. Within a sequential mixed methods design, we first retrospectively analyzed the project baseline data and then conducted Focus Group Discussions, together with ratings of community participation levels. Quantitative descriptive and between group analysis of the baseline survey were used to identify and compare sociodemographic characteristics and prioritized needs of participating communities. We conducted qualitative thematic analysis on Focus Group Discussions, using deductive main categories for triangulation: 1) prioritized needs and 2) lessons learned, with subcategories project impact, facilitators, barriers and community participation. Community participation was assessed via spidergrams. Key findings were compared with triangulation protocols. Results: A total of 348 people with disability from 6 urban settings participated in the baseline survey, with a mean age of 37.6 years (SD 23.8). Out of these, 18 participated within the four Focus Group Discussions. Less than half of the survey participants were able to read and calculate (42.0%) and reported knowledge on health care routes (46.0%). Unemployment (87.9%) and inadequate housing (57.8%) were other prioritized needs across countries. Focus Group Discussions revealed needs within health, education, livelihood, social and empowerment domains. Participants highlighted positive project impact in work inclusion, self-esteem and ability for self-advocacy. Facilitators included individual leadership, community networks and previous reputation of participating organizations. Barriers against successful project implementation were inadequate contextualization, lack of resources and on-site support, mostly due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The overall level of community participation was high (mean score 4.0/5) with lower levels in Brazil (3.8/5) and Bolivia (3.2/5). Conclusion: People with disability still face significant needs. Community Based Inclusive Development can initiate positive changes, but adequate contextualization and on-site support should be assured. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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5. Women Are Survivors: Public Services Announcements on Violence Against Women in Latin America.
- Author
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Mensa, Marta and Grow, Jean M.
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VIOLENCE prevention ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,GENDER ,INTIMATE partner violence ,ADVERTISING ,SELF-efficacy ,EXPERIENCE ,STEREOTYPES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CONTENT analysis ,VICTIMS ,DATA analysis software ,WOMEN'S health ,STORYTELLING - Abstract
This study considers the role that public service announcements (PSAs) play in addressing violence against women (VAW) in Latin America. Using content analysis, the study examines 407 PSAs about VAW from 20 Latin American countries. The results show that 62.3% of the PSAs encourage bystanders to denounce violence while portraying women as victims in 48.8% of the PSAs. However, 71.7% of PSAs did not include a helpline or how to report the crime, only 11.8% of the PSAs have non-narrative, or factual information, about VAW, and just 6.4% engage in compelling narrative messaging or storytelling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Educational Quality Management in Latin America
- Author
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Gamboa-Suárez, Audin Aloiso, Avendaño-Castro, William Rodrigo, and Núñez, Raúl Prada
- Abstract
A bibliometric analysis was carried out on the production and publication of research papers related to the study of the management variable in the quality of education in Latin America. The purpose of the analysis proposed in this document is to know the main characteristics of the volume of publications registered in Scopus database during the period 2016-2021 in Latin American countries, achieving the identification of 1183 publications in total. The information provided by said platform was organized by means of tables and figures categorizing the information by year of publication, Country of Origin, Area of Knowledge and Type of Publication. Once these characteristics were described, a qualitative analysis was used to refer to the position of different authors on the proposed topic. Among the main findings of this research, it is found that Brazil, with 589 publications, is the Latin American country with the highest production. The area of knowledge that made the greatest contribution to the construction of bibliographic material referring to the study of management in the quality of education was Medicine with 538 published documents, and the type of publication that was most used during the period mentioned above was the journal article, representing 71% of the total scientific production.
- Published
- 2022
7. Cost-effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccination in Latin America and the Caribbean: an analysis in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Peru.
- Author
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Federico, Augustovski, Ariel, Bardach, Adrián, Santoro, Federico, Rodriguez-Cairoli, Alejandro, López-Osornio, Fernando, Argento, Maissa, Havela, Alejandro, Blumenfeld, Jamile, Ballivian, Germán, Solioz, Analía, Capula, Analía, López, Cintia, Cejas, William, Savedoff, Alfredo, Palacios, Adolfo, Rubinstein, and Andrés, Pichon-Riviere
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COVID-19 vaccines ,COST control ,COST effectiveness ,RESOURCE allocation ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH planning - Abstract
Objective: Our study analyzes the cost-effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccination campaigns in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Peru. Methods: Using a previously published SVEIR model, we analyzed the impact of a vaccination campaign (2021) from a national healthcare perspective. The primary outcomes were quality adjusted life years (QALYs) lost and total costs. Other outcomes included COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, deaths, and life years. We applied a discount rate of 3% for health outcomes. We modeled a realistic vaccination campaign in each country (the realistic country-specific campaign). Additionally, we assessed a standard campaign (similar, "typical" for all countries), and an optimized campaign (similar in all countries with higher but plausible population coverage). One-way deterministic sensitivity analyses were performed. Findings: Vaccination was health improving as well as cost-saving in almost all countries and scenarios. Our analysis shows that vaccination in this group of countries prevented 573,141 deaths (508,826 standard; 685,442 optimized) and gained 5.07 million QALYs (4.53 standard; 6.03 optimized). Despite the incremental costs of vaccination campaigns, they had a total net cost saving to the health system of US$16.29 billion (US$16.47 standard; US$18.58 optimized). The realistic (base case) vaccination campaign in Chile was the only scenario, which was not cost saving, but it was still highly cost-effective with an ICER of US$22 per QALY gained. Main findings were robust in the sensitivity analyses. Interpretation: The COVID-19 vaccination campaign in seven Latin American and Caribbean countries -that comprise nearly 80% of the region- was beneficial for population health and was also cost-saving or highly cost-effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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8. The Consistency of Trust-Sales Relationship in Latin American E-Commerce.
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Correa, Juan C., Laverde-Rojas, Henry, Martínez, Camilo A., Camargo, Oscar Javier, Rojas-Matute, Gustavo, and Sandoval-Escobar, Marithza
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CUSTOMER relations ,SALES personnel ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,ELECTRONIC commerce ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CONSUMER attitudes ,REGRESSION analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,DATA analysis ,TRUST - Abstract
Customer's trust in vendors' reputation is a key factor that facilitates economic transactions in e-commerce platforms. Although the trust-sales relationship is assumed robust and consistent, its empirical evidence remains neglected for Latin American countries. This work aims to provide a data-driven comprehensive framework for extracting valuable knowledge from public data available in the leading Latin American e-commerce platform with commercial operations in 18 countries. Only Argentina, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Uruguay, and Venezuela showed the highest trust indexes among all nations analyzed. The trust-sales relationship was statistically inconsistent across nations but worked as the most important predictor of sales, followed by purchase intention and price. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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9. Selection of standards for digital television: The battle for Latin America
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Angulo, Jorge, Calzada, Joan, and Estruch, Alejandro
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DIGITAL television , *DIGITAL communications standards , *DIGITAL technology , *MOBILE television standards - Abstract
Abstract: This paper analyses the implementation of Terrestrial Digital Technology (TDT) standards in Latin America. The analysis suggests that while some governments have chosen the standard attending to their industrial objectives, others have been influenced by the relevance of network externalities and scale economies and by the political and commercial relationship with their neighbours. The discussion about the technical characteristics of the systems was only relevant in the first years of the process, when the leading countries of the region had still not made their selection. Brazil decided to create its own version of the Japanese ISDB standard in 2006, and in the following years it has persuaded a significant part of the continent to choose it. Another block of countries has adopted the US ATSC standard. The most prominent case is that of Mexico, which has a preferential access to the US market. Only three countries have chosen the European DVB standard, the most widely used standard in the world. Colombia has tried to lead its introduction in the continent, but the results so far have been meagre. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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10. CAPITAL INTENSITY AND EXPORT PROPENSITY IN SOME LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES.
- Author
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Sosin, Kim and Fairchild, Loretta
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CAPITAL intensity ,CAPITAL investments ,TIME series analysis ,MATHEMATICAL models of economics ,MATHEMATICAL economics ,TEXTILE industry ,METAL industry ,RUBBER industry ,PLASTICS industries - Abstract
The article examines the relevance of two eclectic theory hypotheses about technology in Latin America. It uses a cross-section time-series pooled sample of unique firm-level data that covers the textiles, metal products, and rubber and plastics industries with different export propensities and product cycle stages located in Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Central America at different development levels. An eclectic technology theory of the determination of capital-intensity has been tested.
- Published
- 1987
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11. A civil society view of rare disease public policy in six Latin American countries.
- Author
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Mayrides, Mo, Ruiz de Castilla, Eva Maria, and Szelepski, Silvina
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RARE diseases ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIVIL society ,DRUG control ,ORPHAN drugs ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Patients with rare diseases across the world struggle to access timely diagnosis and state-of-the-art treatment and management of their conditions. Several recently published reviews highlight the importance of country efforts to address rare diseases and orphan drugs policy comprehensively. However, many of these reviews lack depth and detail at the local level, which we believe is necessary for rare disease advocates to identify and prioritize opportunities for strengthening each country's policy framework.We asked leading patient advocates from civil society organizations their views on rare disease public policy in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru with a focus on whether specific laws and regulations in these six Latin American countries have been promulgated. From December 2018 to March 2019 we supplemented their perspectives with evidence from accessible literature using key search terms. For each country, we prepared a detailed analysis on how laws or other policy initiatives took shape and the steps taken since to implement them. This allowed us to identify five broad policy categories for subsequent analysis: national laws, national regulations, health system incorporation of rare disease treatments, care delivery, and patient engagement.By describing the different approaches, challenges and timelines across six countries, our research demonstrates that strengthening rare disease policy first requires a common understanding and local consensus of each country's recent past and current situation. Subsequent analysis based on a set of common policy dimensions led us to where we believe salient opportunities lie for each of these countries to strengthen their overall policy framework for rare disease patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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12. Effect sizes and cut-off points: a meta-analytical review of burnout in latin American countries.
- Author
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García-Arroyo, Jose and Segovia, Amparo Osca
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PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EMOTIONS ,LANGUAGE & languages ,MEDICAL personnel ,META-analysis ,NURSES ,PHYSICIANS ,POLICE ,SOCIAL workers ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,TEACHERS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,ACHIEVEMENT ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) - Abstract
Burnout is a highly prevalent globalized health issue that causes significant physical and psychological health problems. In Latin America research on this topic has increased in recent years, however there are no studies comparing results across countries, nor normative reference cut-offs. The present meta-analysis examines the intensity of burnout (emotional exhaustion, cynicism and personal accomplishment) in 58 adult nonclinical samples from 8 countries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela). We found low intensity of burnout but there are significant differences between countries in emotional exhaustion explained by occupation and language. Social and human service professionals (police officers, social workers, public administration staff) are more exhausted than health professionals (physicians, nurses) or teachers. The samples with Portuguese language score higher in emotional exhaustion than Spanish, supporting the theory of cultural relativism. Demographics (sex, age) and study variables (sample size, instrument), were not found significant to predict burnout. The effect size and confidence intervals found are proposed as a useful baseline for research and medical diagnosis of burnout in Latin American countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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13. Understanding unlikely successes in urban violence reduction.
- Author
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Hoelscher, Kristian and Nussio, Enzo
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URBAN violence prevention ,TOWN security & safety measures ,VIOLENCE ,COMPARATIVE economics ,RISK of violence - Abstract
The problems of violence in Latin America are often reiterated, yet understanding how and why violence declines is far less common. While urban violence takes different forms and has a range of motivations, we suggest that strengthening political and social institutions are important in violence reduction processes. We examine this using a comparative analysis of two cities which have recently seen unusual and marked reductions in lethal violence: Bogotá in Colombia and Recife in Brazil. Drawing on primary data collection, the case studies suggest that novel leaders who take advantage of critical junctures can deliver unexpected improvements to public security; and improvements are linked with institutionalising progressive security policies, increasing accountability of political institutions, and social reforms encouraging civic values and commitments to non-violence. While findings are specific to these two cases, they may plausibly apply to a broader range of cities, such that commitments to improve public policy and political institutions can overcome structural risk factors that foster violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. Blackness, Indigeneity, Multiculturalism and Genomics in Brazil, Colombia and Mexico.
- Author
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WADE, PETER
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RACE ,BLACK Latin Americans ,MESTIZOS ,GENOMICS ,RACIAL identity of Black people ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Latin American Studies is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2013
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15. Sinopsis de la obra en idioma inglés.
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STRATEGIC planning , *SUCCESS , *COMMERCIAL policy , *ECONOMIC policy , *FOREIGN trade promotion , *INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
In the 1960's, various Latin American countries began to implement an external sector development strategy by utilizing policies that would increase their amount of exported goods. The success that is encountered with such policies is dependent upon several key factors and instruments, including financial, import, and commercial policies. The goal of the paper is to review the success that varying countries, such as Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico, after the policy has been implemented.
- Published
- 1985
16. Latin America's tax officials speak out.
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TAX administration & procedure ,TAXATION - Abstract
The article discusses how tax officials view the flaws of their tax administrations in Latin America. It says that dealing with the drastic reforms was an unpleasant experience for Dirección de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales (DIAN) commissioner Juan Ricardo Ortega, who was charged with the role of fixing the main cause of Colombia's budget problem. According to the Receita Federal do Brasil undersecretary of taxation Sandro Serpa, the Federal Revenue Service of Brazil aims to cut the costs and complexity without losing revenue. The financial transaction tax under Colombia's tax reform in December 2010 and the thin-capitalization rules established by Brazilian tax authorities in 2010 are also discussed.
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- 2011
17. Metropolitan migration and population growth in selected developing countries.
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- Africa, Algeria, Americas, Argentina, Asia, Birth Rate, Brazil, Central America, Chile, Colombia, Developed Countries, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Geography, Ghana, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Iran, Korea, Latin America, Mexico, Mortality, North America, Peru, Philippines, Population Characteristics, Population Density, Singapore, Socioeconomic Factors, South Africa, South America, Syria, Thailand, Venezuela, Demography, Developing Countries, Economics, Emigration and Immigration, Population, Population Dynamics, Population Growth, Social Planning, Transients and Migrants, Urban Population, Urbanization
- Published
- 1983
18. Marine protected areas in Latin America and Caribbean threatened by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
- Author
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Nunes BZ, Zanardi-Lamardo E, Choueri RB, and Castro ÍB
- Subjects
- Argentina, Brazil, Caribbean Region, Colombia, Environmental Monitoring, Geologic Sediments, Latin America, Mexico, Uruguay, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
The present study is a literature-based analysis investigating occurrence and the possible consequences of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in marine protected areas (MPAs) of Latin America and Caribbean. The approach using overlapping of georeferenced MPA polygons with data compiled from peer-reviewed literature, published during the last 15 years, showed 341 records of PAH in 9 countries. PAH was reported to occur within the boundaries of 36 MPAs located in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Nicaragua and Uruguay. According to quality guidelines, low to moderate impacts are expected in MPAs categorized in different management classes. Considering sediment samples, 13% of the records presented concentrations enough to cause occasional toxicity. Such level of risk was also seen in Ramsar sites and in Amazonian MPAs. In addition, based on concentrations reported in biota, occasional deleterious effects on organisms from Biosphere Reserves might occur. Diagnostic ratios pointed out petrogenic and pyrolytic processes as PAH predominant sources, and were mainly attributed to the proximity to ports, industries and urban areas. MPAs located in the vicinity of impact-generating areas may be under threat and require government attention and action, mainly through implementation of contamination monitoring programs., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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19. The Paris pledges and the energy-water-land nexus in Latin America: Exploring implications of greenhouse gas emission reductions.
- Author
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Santos Da Silva SR, Miralles-Wilhelm F, Muñoz-Castillo R, Clarke LE, Braun CJ, Delgado A, Edmonds JA, Hejazi M, Horing J, Horowitz R, Kyle P, Link R, Patel P, Turner S, and McJeon HC
- Subjects
- Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Greenhouse Gases, Latin America, Mexico, Environmental Policy, Global Warming, Greenhouse Effect, Water Resources
- Abstract
In the 2015 Paris Agreement, nations worldwide pledged emissions reductions (Nationally Determined Contributions-NDCs) to avert the threat of climate change, and agreed to periodically review these pledges to strengthen their level of ambition. Previous studies have analyzed NDCs largely in terms of their implied contribution to limit global warming, their implications on the energy sector or on mitigation costs. Nevertheless, a gap in the literature exists regarding the understanding of implications of the NDCs on countries' Energy-Water-Land nexus resource systems. The present paper explores this angle within the regional context of Latin America by employing the Global Change Assessment Model, a state-of-the-art integrated assessment model capable of representing key system-wide interactions among nexus sectors and mitigation policies. By focusing on Brazil, Mexico, Argentina and Colombia, we stress potential implications on national-level water demands depending on countries' strategies to enforce energy-related emissions reductions and their interplays with the land sector. Despite the differential implications of the Paris pledges on each country, increased water demands for crop and biomass irrigation and for electricity generation stand out as potential trade-offs that may emerge under the NDC policy. Hence, this study underscores the need of considering a nexus resource planning framework (known as "Nexus Approach") in the forthcoming NDCs updating cycles as a mean to contribute toward sustainable development., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2019
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20. [Mental health laws and the psychiatric reform in Latin America: Multiple paths to its implementation].
- Author
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Agrest M, Mascayano F, Teodoro de Assis R, Molina-Bulla C, and Ardila-Gómez S
- Subjects
- Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Latin America, Health Care Reform, Mental Health legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
This paper describes and analyzes the psychiatric reform process in three Latin American countries (Brazil, Chile and Colombia) based on the Caracas Declaration of 1990. It compares the psychiatric reform processes in these three countries and highlights the role of national mental health laws in these processes. Our goal when investigating the experiences in other countries of Latin America is to draw conclusions for the Argentine psychiatric reform and for the future of such reforms in the region.
- Published
- 2018
21. Transport and health: a look at three Latin American cities.
- Author
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Becerra JM, Reis RS, Frank LD, Ramirez-Marrero FA, Welle B, Arriaga Cordero E, Mendez Paz F, Crespo C, Dujon V, Jacoby E, Dill J, Weigand L, and Padin CM
- Subjects
- Automobiles statistics & numerical data, Bicycling statistics & numerical data, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Humans, Latin America, Ownership statistics & numerical data, Ownership trends, Public Policy, Socioeconomic Factors, Transportation statistics & numerical data, Walking statistics & numerical data, Motor Activity, Public Health, Transportation methods
- Abstract
Transport is associated with environmental problems, economic losses, health and social inequalities. A number of European and US cities have implemented initiatives to promote multimodal modes of transport. In Latin America changes are occurring in public transport systems and a number of projects aimed at stimulating non-motorized modes of transport (walking and cycling) have already been implemented. Based on articles from peer-reviewed academic journals, this paper examines experiences in Bogotá (Colombia), Curitiba (Brazil), and Santiago (Chile), and identifies how changes to the transport system contribute to encourage active transportation. Bus rapid transit, ciclovias, bike paths/lanes, and car use restriction are initiatives that contribute to promoting active transportation in these cities. Few studies have been carried out on the relationship between transport and physical activity. Car ownership continues to increase. The public health sector needs to be a stronger activist in the transport policy decision-making process to incorporate health issues into the transport agenda in Latin America.
- Published
- 2013
22. [Understanding homicides in Latin America: poverty or institutionalization?].
- Author
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Briceño-León R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Brazil epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Colombia epidemiology, Crime, Female, Humans, Latin America epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Venezuela epidemiology, Young Adult, Homicide statistics & numerical data, Poverty, Social Control, Formal
- Abstract
Homicides occur the world over, but they are not homogeneously distributed by geographical areas (continents, countries, regions), either over long or short periods of time, or in social groups, namely age, gender, social class or ethnicity. Why are there more homicides in some countries than in others? Why do killings increase in some countries, while they decrease in others? There are two fundamental schools of thought for social explanations of crime and violence: those attributing its origins to poverty and inequality and those blaming institutionalization or social norms. To discuss these theories, this paper analyzes and compares the changes in Colombia, Venezuela and Brazil in the first decade of the twenty-first century, where the homicide rate has decreased, increased and remained the same, respectively. Using the measurement of six variables (poverty, inequality, unemployment, national wealth, human development and the rule of law) and the technique of trajectory analysis, the results revealed that institutionalization is more to blame for the change than poverty and inequality. The text concludes that poverty and inequality affect crime and homicides, although not directly, but mediated by the institutions instead.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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23. The current status of abortion laws in Latin America: prospects and strategies for change.
- Author
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Boland R
- Subjects
- Abortion, Therapeutic, Argentina, Brazil, Catholicism, Civil Rights, Colombia, Criminal Law, Developing Countries, Family Planning Services, Humans, Latin America, Legislation as Topic, Maternal Welfare, Mexico, Mortality, Politics, Pregnancy, Pregnant Women, Rape, Socioeconomic Factors, Uruguay, Abortion, Criminal, Abortion, Induced, Government Regulation, Jurisprudence, Social Control, Formal
- Abstract
In order to explore ways of dealing with this phenomenon of illegal abortions and restrictive abortion laws in Latin America, several special sessions were held at last summer's international conference in Toronto, sponsored by the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics. The sessions brought together lawyers, health professionals, and reproductive rights advocates from a number of Latin American countries; their counterparts in the developed world; and representatives of non-governmental agencies concerned with this issue, including Catholics for a Free Choice. The goal of the sessions was to share information on the status of abortion in various countries and to try to devise strategies to make abortion law reform more palatable to Latin American governments and public opinion. One major component of the sessions was a series of papers prepared by some of the Latin American representatives describing and analyzing the situations in their countries. The papers illustrate some of the issues facing women in this part of the world.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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