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Editorial

EDITORIAL

Editorial

The health of the Americas advances without a break in the sense of achieving the Millennium Development Objectives and attention to the national and regional socio-sanitary priorities. However, within this process, the enormous debt of inequality increases in order to alert that many and arduous efforts are needed to overcome the sad and concerning designation of "most unequal continent on the planet."

The renovation of Primary Health Care (PHC) is the strategy that American governments have chosen in order to combat inequalities, in order to achieve the right of the highest level of health possible for all the hemisphere's citizens, in order to reach equity in health care, and in order to generate mechanisms for solidarity in social and health care systems which permit previous goals to be attained.

Thus, the PHC renovation, according to that defined by governments in the Americas, instead of a practical strategy, is a set of values, principles, and elements which may be adopted by countries in order to face socio-sanitary problems equitably and develop health care systems that respond to their needs with creativity, relevance, and contextualization.

In the Americas, nursing has dedicated commitment, intelligence, and efforts towards the health of the population in guaranteeing safe and accessible care to all. More than ever, nursing services are necessary in order to face inequalities, maternal and infantile morbidity, chronic disease, immunization, the consequences from natural disasters and violence, preventing harmful substance abuse, mental health problems, in order to generate community health care promotion and protection, as well as to contribute to the development of integrated health care service networks. However, nursing care is necessary in all phases of life, from its beginning to end.

In order to attend such care demands, nursing must be prepared to propose new health care models which might contribute to altering the scenario of health care in the Americas. Nursing must redouble its scientific, practical, political, and administrative efforts in order place greater focus on health care than even nursing itself. It is a challenge for nursing to generate reflection and action towards strengthening and expanding its awareness of society and the adoption of society as a unit of analysis and care unit; a qualitative jump which supposed the scientific, epidemiological, and health care determinant perspective for each action.

The confidence our communities have in nurses and nursing is a trust filled with hope and expectation which goes beyond affection and reaches the limits of confidence and responsibility. It is a confidence in nursing's contribution to improving the health care system. Thus, progress in renovating the PHCs and its contribution to reaching the highest level of health for everyone may depend in large part upon the capacity and commitment that nurses have in accepting their social mission.

Within this context, the nursing perspective is directed to this challenge, a key dimension of the process is in the production, release, and transfer of human care knowledge; a dimension which is generated through nursing research and the socialization of its results.

Thus, both promoting investigative policies such as continued education and the creation of opportunities for dialogue among universities and services are the principle strategies to providing incentive for service changes, seeking solutions to health care problems, and to producing and accumulating evidence to sustain care policies and practices.

The Pan-American Nursing Investigation Colloquiums were inaugurated in 1988. Since then, they have occurred biannually with the support of the Pan-American Health Organization and from the sustained commitment from Latin American universities and nursing organizations. They represent an opportunity for articulation, synergy, and the promotion of nursing research, as well as consolidate a history of academic and scientific co-existence among nurses from different countries within Latin America to develop care within the international context, as well as to promote a strong adherence to a program of collective priorities and commitments towards health knowledge.

In 2010, at the 12th edition carried out in Florianópolis, Santa Catarina, Brazil, under the organization and coordination of the Federal University of Santa Catarina, the Pan-American Nursing Investigation Colloquium deepened the reflection upon the ontoepistemological foundations of knowledge and advances in the construction of alternatives to developing health knowledge as a regional and glocal public good.

In this edition of Texto & Contexto Nursing Journal, we provide scientific advances which have been shared within this space for scientific interactino. A diffusion of this nature is vital for nursing, because it is as important as knowledge production and socialization.

Transferring knowledge into health care and nursing practices within all scenarios of action, partnership promotion, the aligning of nursing teaching and research to peoples' health care needs and development, as well as establishing a strategy collective agenda in order to provide incentive for research and promote its social relevance, have been the principle results of this continental encounter, whose debates were are able to accompany today.

Silvina Malvárez

Regional Nursing and Health Technician Advisor for the Pan-American Health Organization /World Health Organization

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    02 Dec 2011
  • Date of issue
    2011
Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Programa de Pós Graduação em Enfermagem Campus Universitário Trindade, 88040-970 Florianópolis - Santa Catarina - Brasil, Tel.: (55 48) 3721-4915 / (55 48) 3721-9043 - Florianópolis - SC - Brazil
E-mail: textoecontexto@contato.ufsc.br