The urban environment from the health perspective: the case of Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil

This study aims to determine spatial patterns of mortality and morbidity for five health problems in an urban environment: homicides, adolescent pregnancy, asthma hospitalization, and two vector-borne diseases, dengue and visceral leishmaniasis. All events were obtained through the city health datab...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cadernos de saúde pública 2005-06, Vol.21 (3), p.958-967
Hauptverfasser: Caiaffa, Waleska Teixeira, Almeida, Maria Cristina de Mattos, Oliveira, Claúdia Di Lorenzo, Friche, Amélia Augusta de Lima, Matos, Sônia Gesteira E, Dias, Maria Angélica Salles, Cunha, Maria da Consolação Magalhães, Pessanha, Eduardo, Proietti, Fernando Augusto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study aims to determine spatial patterns of mortality and morbidity for five health problems in an urban environment: homicides, adolescent pregnancy, asthma hospitalization, and two vector-borne diseases, dengue and visceral leishmaniasis. All events were obtained through the city health database and geoprocessed using residential addresses and 80 planning units consisting of census tracts. We used thematic maps, proportionate mortality/morbidity ratios by planning unit, and the overlapped rank of the 20th worse planning unit rates for each event. A spatial pattern of high rates of homicides, proportion of young mothers, and hospitalization due to asthma overlapped in socially and economically disadvantaged areas. For the two vector-borne diseases, high rates with great dispersion were found in underprivileged areas, in contrast with very low rates among higher income areas. The results indicated the coexistence of heavier disease burden for residents of urban areas where poverty and lack of effective public health policies may be modulating social health problems. For the two vector-borne diseases, an environmental intervention in one mosquito-borne disease might be playing a role in the other's incidence.
ISSN:0102-311X
1678-4464
0102-311X
1678-4464
DOI:10.1590/s0102-311x2005000300032