Vol. 49 No. 144 (2025): Saúde em Debate

Saúde em Debate v. 49, n. 144, jan-mar, 2025

The editorial of the first edition of 2025 presents the proposals of the new board of the Brazilian Center for Health Studies (Cebes) for the 2025-2026 management: “The following two years will be of intense work. We will pay special attention to the financial sustainability of Cebes, membership expansion, and generational renewal, incorporating new themes into the political and academic debate. We will strengthen our activities as a Study Center, improving our analysis and formulation role while maintaining and expanding our ties with civil society and the population. We continue together. Long live Cebes!”.

Topics covered: COVID-19 pandemic on Maternal Mortality in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul; Social movements and public policies in the construction of health rights; Sexuality and human rights in a school context; Occupational stress among civil engineering professionals in the Brazilian Amazon; Nutritional care to address obesity in Primary Health Care; Social movements, human rights and the people deprived of liberty in the context of COVID-19; Home nutritional care for children and adolescents followed by the Better at Home Program; Matrix support and maintenance of the link with primary care; Health movement in the 2013-2022 context; Masculinity constructions on the health of homeless men in Florianópolis-SC; Return-to-Work challenges from workers’ perspective after work-related sick leave; The database quality of the National Controlled Products Management System; Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices instrument for coping with epidemics and pandemics; Institutional support in health management: The case of COSEMS-CONASEMS supporters; The federal incentive for Physical Activity in primary care; The Discourse of Collective Affirmation about COVID-19 pandemic life experiences in the São Remo favela; Educational practices on sexually transmitted infections; Protocol for referring patients with cervical cancer to palliative care; The performance of the National Health Council in the National Policy on Pharmaceutical Assistance; Social markers of difference, intersectionality and collective health: Necessary dialogues for health teaching; The One Health approach to face bacterial resistance to antibiotics in livestock production; Chronicity in mental health in Brazilian scientific production; Evaluating policies, programs, and services for sexual violence care; Performance of health consortia in the Brazilian public health system; Pesticides and the development of cancer in farmers; High-cost medicines present in Brazilian scientific and academic literature on health judicialization; Practices and beliefs in childcare relationships in quilombola territories; Coping with syphilis in homeless people.

Published: 2025-02-05

Original Article

Review

Case Study