Issue The fragile reading habit is a common feature in Brazil, having wide negative impacts in Health and Education areas. Itapoã-DF presents important social vulnerabilities with challenges about the reading habit. Stimulating individual reading from early childhood to elderly, associated with positive reinforcement during doctor appointments, is a way to provide health education. Description of the problem In October of 2016, the “Prescreva um Livro” (prescribe a book) project began from childcare doctor appointments, by encouraging children with books and the borrowing of material, in addition to positive reinforcement in consultations. In 2019, book references for adults were incorporated into the chapters of the School of Patients DF - especially for prenatal care and chronic conditions such as hypertension. It highlights the potencial of primary care as point of encouragement for reading and community support, reading coordinator. Results The Reading stimulus brought, since 2016, a change in the relationship of young people with the service, making it a space of curiosity and fun instead of “fear of needles”. The importance of primary care in constructive stimuli to reading is reinforced even more considering the difficulties of education in Brazil. Lessons Initially focused on children and adolescents, the practice was incorporated into the health education strategy of the School of Patients, grouping prevalent comorbidities and printed guidelines delivered at each consultation. The participating children reported the stories they had read at subsequent visits. This feedback reinforces the influence that the primary care environment can have in several areas of the user's life, including reading Key messages Waiting rooms and home visits are opportunities to exchange information also of a literary nature. The stimulus to reading is vital for the full exercise of citizenship, and health services can be a reference for reading.
Background The region of practice of the School of Patients DF is vulnerable at health literacy and income. Audiovisual information is strategic in primary care for its great power of reach and information retention. Objectives Since 2016 videos of health education have been produced, initially technical on the Planification for hypertension and diabetes. After the focus switched to popular health education, aiming at improving communication between health professionals and patients on chronic diseases and health promotion, including testimonials. The is potential for video exhibition in qualified waiting rooms and forwarding in social network. Results There are videos from diabetes, hypertension, obesity to dengue, pre-natal care and other APS themes, which follow printed orientation with pertinent links. There are graduate and post-graduate studies in course for optimizing audio-visual content for support and capacitation of the family caregivers, especially regarding the facilitated visual model of prescription (“Illustrated Prescription”). Data until 2020-January: YOUTUBE 3146 views, 118,6 hours of exhibition, 50 videos. FACEBOOK page with a reach of 369.248 views. INSTAGRAM 10.119 followers, 193 posts, 37.800 likes and 1003 commentaries. Conclusions Modifications in lifestyle and adherence to medication are fundamental for treatment, and videos are promising for health promotion and selfcare capacitation. There is potential for reducing the hierarchy barriers (testimonials). The shared construction of knowledge and its dissemination makes the patient active part in community diffusion of information. Key messages Health professionals have a vital role as educators, including for social online networks. Patients have a protagonist role in their treatment, as well as multipliers of knowledge at their community.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.