Diagnosis of the situation of health workers and the training process at a regional center for professional health education

The policy of professional health education has been put into operation by the centers of professional health education in a decentralized way. Aiming to identify the needs of the health sector at a regional level, a survey was carried out to investigate the situation of workers in the public health network of 22 cities in the 10th Paraná Health District, Brazil. Questionnaires and document analysis were used in this qualitative and quantitative exploratory study. Results revealed that 35.6% of the workers did not participate in any educational activities between 2004 and 2006. In terms of work contracts, 78.7% had only one job, 50.2% were government employees, and 25.2% had unstable contracts, showing that the sector incorporated the productivity and flexibility rationales. The conclusion is that the centers of professional education, jointly with teaching and management institutions, need to clearly define policies for the health sector at a regional level.

The policy of professional health education has been put into operation by the centers of professional health education in a decentralized way.Aiming to identify the needs of the health sector at a regional level, a survey was carried out to investigate the situation of workers in the public health network of 22 cities in the 10th Paraná Health District, Brazil.Questionnaires and document analysis were used in this qualitative and quantitative exploratory study.Results revealed that 35.6% of the workers did not participate in any educational activities between 2004 and 2006.In terms of work contracts, 78.7% had only one job, 50.2% were government employees, and 25.2% had unstable contracts, showing that the sector incorporated the productivity and flexibility rationales.The conclusion is that the centers of professional education, jointly with teaching and management institutions, need to clearly define policies for the health sector at a regional level.DESCRIPTORS: human resources; education, continuing; single health system

INTRODUCTION
The new dynamics of production has led to intense transformation, especially in the labor area, through the incorporation of new management modes and technology, reorganizing productive processes, reducing work positions in the industry and contributing to the expansion of the service sector (1) .In the health area, as from the 1990s, this process in Brazil was favored by public policies like the Program of Community Health Agents (PACS), agents to fight dengue, among others, which absorbs workers dismissed from other areas without specific qualification.This process, coupled to the sector's commodification, has led to increased turnover in public health services and unstable labor relations, which impede the creation of ties between workers and employers, knowledge on the real health condition of the community and the work team itself (2) .
In addition to these, other problems have SUS has progressed more rapidly in this area than changes adopted in education (3)   .
Several Latin American countries, including Brazil, promoted large reforms in their health systems in the 1990s.However, these changes were focused on financial aspects and management systems, with little emphasis on health workers.This may have contributed to the continuity of many problems in the sector, such as: unequal access and permanence of the predominant health care model (4) .
One proposes to be a training/teaching and system management strategy, so as to change the health care process, the elaboration of policies and social control in the health sector (5) .
The The state of Paraná received six enlarged centers in the health macro-regions and 22 regional centers, one in each regional health center (6) .
In order to comply with its functions defined

MATERIAL AND METHOD
This qualitative and quantitative exploratory study was carried out through document analysis of The content of open questions was grouped into thematic units and individuals' discourse identified by a number of order, preceded by the letter "Q".
Answers of closed questions were systematized in absolute frequency and percentage.Occupations were grouped based on the methodology that defines occupation in the health area according to its activities and classifies them in three groups: core, related and others.The analysis was based on literature related to the topic under study.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The majority of the participants was female (78%), with secondary school (55.2%), weekly workload of 40 hours (75.9%), with only one work contract (78.7%) and five years of work (55.2%).
Participant occupation groups are presented in Table 1.
Occupations in the core group predominate, considering that, from the 50 occupations found, 20 were core activities (68.9%), 25 were related occupations (23.1%), and five were from the others group (3.1%) (Table 1).Among the occupations from the core group, the nursing team (nurse, nursing technician, nursing auxiliary and community health agent -CHA) was a majority (51.5%).Although CHA does not meet the requirement of specific education (9) , which is demanded in the core group, it constitutes a new member integrated in the health team, according to social policies implemented by the MS in the 1990s.
The diverse composition of the work force in the health area demands effective actions from the government to regulate occupational performance, aiming for the quality of care delivery, which should not depend solely on the market regulation (10) .
When we related schooling with occupation, we found that the majority (55.2%) had secondary education and only 1% had a master's degree, the highest educational level found.Considering that the required educational level is primary education, the quantity of CHAs with a bachelor's degree (   Although the majority of workers were hired as government employees (50.2%), unstable job positions were evidenced by the existence of temporary contracts (11.7%), other kinds of contracts (7.6%) and not reported types of contracts (5.9%) (Table 3).
The majority of respondents (78.7%) had only one work contract and a minority (9.2%) two to four work contracts.Members of the nursing team (4.2%), the physician (1.5%) and the dentist (0.8%) were among those with two work contracts.Working in shifts favors multiple work contracts and it has become a way to compensate for wage losses, despite risks and harms they cause to care delivery and to workers' health (11) .
Following the general trend of the current economy, the health sector also incorporated the rationale of flexible work relations, reducing formal contracts, eliminating limited workloads and increasing the volume of contracts for undetermined periods.
Estimates are that approximately 600 thousand health workers do not have legal support and regularity of professional work in Brazil (12) .The main challenge of the MS policy called "DesprecarizaSUS", aimed to value workers, is to enlarge the consensus on the concept of unstable work (12) .Unstable work, according to labor unions, is characterized not only by the absence of workers' legal rights and social security, due to indiscriminate outsourcing, inexistent or irregular contracts via cooperatives and commissioned positions to provide direct care to the population (13) , but also by the absence of public sector recruitment examination or government employment in SUS (12) .
The reduced number of stable workers and the increased number of professionals in temporary positions (13) affect the quality of health care delivery, especially because the latter occasionally participate in the development of health actions, which fragments care and weakens projects based on integrality and equity.Thus, discussion of educational practices linked to professional education projects have to be tied to the context in which policies aiming to enhance the work force in the health area are elaborated.
Training practices that aim to transform health care have been discussed in Brazilian conferences in health and human resources, which are milestones in the definition of policies for the health sector (9) .Thus, different initiatives in the area of health education have been developed, with a special focus on continuing and professional health education actions.
While the first aims to contribute to the reorganization of health services, the second aims to transform work processes focused on the improvement of service quality and on equitable care and access to health services.
In the socialization process that takes place in health institutions, as a practice area and as cultural and educative institutions, different professions are confirmed and completed and the necessary professional practices and competences are molded (6) .
The main ways to updating knowledge mentioned by the study participants, in a set of nine options, were: information provided by the institution (26.6%), participation in events (18.3%) and newsletters (13.8%).The least mentioned were: library (4.5%) and scientific journals (4.9%).These results confirm the importance of institutional initiatives to update the knowledge of health workers.
Data on educative activities revealed that 35.6% of the workers did not participate in any activity in the studied period (2004 to 2006).Among those, the largest part belonged to the group of "related" activities (46.5%), followed by the group of "core" activities (31.7%) and "others" (27.6%).Among those who participated in training and updating activities, the majority (40.6%) had attended one to two events in a three-year period, less than a participation/year, which is considered low due to the rapid changes that occur in the health area.Participation in educational activities is a way to democratize institutional relations and a strategy to recompose relations among the population, health workers and managers.For that, the organizational culture based on the centralization of decisions and verticalization of programs and projects needs to be overcome, as proposed by the professional education policy (6) .Participation of members from groups of health occupations is unequal and unbalanced, with privileges for those who occupy management positions in the bureaucratic structure.Activities focusing on personal relationship, quality of service, motivation and humanization of care were included in the educational activities of the three groups of occupations.These activities are in agreement with flexible management, which among other characteristics, presupposes workers' relational capacity (1) .Workers are required to have minimum education, like in the case of CHAs (9) , but at the same obtain improved performance at the expense of breaking solidarity among workers (1) .Another characteristic required by flexible management is the multipurpose worker (1) , that is, people capable of

CONCLUSION
This study evidences that the majority of workers in primary care attended some kind of training/education activity in the studied period.
been discussed since the beginning of the health reform, such as the need to change the care model and health professionals' education, which indicate the gap between professional education and the needs of the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS), as undergraduate programs keep training professionals without considering the advancement achieved in this area by the public sector, especially in primary care.
by the National Policy of Professional Health Education, the Management Committee at PREPS/Western considered it necessary to perform an initial diagnosis of the human resources existent, in terms of quantity and other aspects regarding education, different levels of formal education, refresher training, qualification, training and courses these workers might have attended after their initial formal education in the studied period.In this perspective, this study aimed to carry out a survey to know the situation of health professionals working in public health services in the cities included in the scope area of the 10 th RS and to identify educational activities attended between 2004 and 2006.
Regarding educational activities promoted by PREPS/Western, 40 activities including courses, events, workshops and training were approved and carried out between 2004 and 2006, 11 activities in 2004, 17 in 2005 and 12 in 2006.In this set of activities, 12 (30%) focused on specific diseases, nine (22.5%) aimed to discuss aspects related to SUS (principles and guidelines or system management) and four activities were related to professional education (10%).Demands from the sectors in the 10 th RS determined the Center activities, which aimed to train and/or sensitize municipal teams for specific actions.The adopted teaching methodologies mainly included the problematization strategy, discussion opportunities, group study and presentations with dialogue.
Those who participated in training activities considered them a great opportunity to update their techno-scientific knowledge, both to develop their technical abilities and to understand the SUS operating mechanisms, such as social control and management pact.Strong dissociation between health workers' practice and SUS principles predominates in the studied region, which contributes to maintain a vertical and unequal relation between those who know and those who supposedly do not know, as the following discourse shows: […] the greatest difficulty is to convince the population to follow recommendations on hygiene and adequate treatment (Q923).
working in different sectors by performing […] several functions within his position, thus avoiding that employees are conditioned to a single task (Q328).This report reveals that the incorporation of the multi-functionality and multipurpose discourse is typical of the current process of capital reproduction.The "new" mode of work management has influenced the relationship among the team as reported by interviewees when they list the following difficulties: competitiveness, lack of unity, lack of democracy in the work environment, lack of respect from superiors, co-workers and users, little ethical behavior from the leadership towards the team and patients.These are obstacles in the development of collective work and lead to conflicts in the work environment, especially because they are related to social relationships involving several workers with different intentions, in which people are coherent with their perspective of the world, work and social practices.The practice, still common in health institutions, to provide people with jobs based on political criteria, e.g.alliance established during elections, leads to problems because oftentimes people without proper training and knowledge occupy leading positions.In addition to frequent interruptions of projects and programs, which make medium and long-term projects infeasible, the health workers' daily routine is marked by constant demands from users and coordination.Thus, government employers expect […] to be seen as human beings and not as working machines (Q758).Among their suggestions to overcome difficulties, participants indicated the availability of courses focused on education, worker's motivation and improvement of the workplace.These reports show a work environment little consistent with those who should promote health.Difficulties faced in work justify their demand to reduce current weekly workload to […] 30 hours, this work is exhausting, stressful and requires concentration (Q326).And provide a professional in the psychological area to attend the staff (Q651, Q676, Q831, Q391).[…] aiming to take care of workers' mental health (Q100).This discourse shows the weariness experienced by health workers in the work process, which has incorporated the general rationale of the productive sector, demanding productivity and quality of care without equivalent improvement of work conditions.
However, acquired knowledge was not always implemented due to organizational and managerial problems.Conflicts between workers and users and among team members were observed as a consequence of anti-ethical attitudes.The majority (50.2%) of workers were hired as government employees, although unstable work ties were found, which can hinder the development of professional educational projects due to reduced adherence, high mobility and turnover of workers in institutional projects.The diagnosis, whose main results were presented in this study, should guide the Committee of Management at PREPS/Western from the 10 th Paraná Health District in the elaboration of professional health education policies and in the establishment of priorities for its implementation in the short, medium and long terms.In addition, it will show teaching institutions and public management the health sector's real needs in terms of education and professional development of health workers.
Western and a survey, whose data were collected by a questionnaire with open and closed questions, distributed to people working in the public health sector of the 22 cities * that compose the 10 th RS.

Table 1 -
Number of workers according to groups ofThe primary care strategy, which is the reorganizing axis of the health system, absorbs the largest number of workers in the health area in the Rev Latino-am Enfermagem 2009 maio-junho; 17(3):314-20 www.eerp.usp.br/rlaeDiagnosis of the situation of health workers and the training… Murofuse NT, Rizzotto MLF, Muzzolon ABF, Nicola AL.studied population (Table2).The Municipal Health Secretaries were the main employers.Regarding place of work, the Health Centers (33.2%),Family Health Units (19.3%) and Basic Health Units (17.5%) concentrated the majority of occupations (70%), and represent the reorganization process of the health system operating in Brazil.

Table 2 -
Number of workers according to place of

Table 3 -
Number of health workers according to the type of work contract and group of occupations.
*Refers to commissioned positions, cooperative and trainees.