Resilience in public health: precepts, concepts, challenges, and perspectives

Alessandro Jatobá Paulo Victor Rodrigues de Carvalho About the authors

ABSTRACT

In a health system, resilience is manifested in the ability to adapt to demands or to adverse and disruptive events, such as epidemics and/or disasters, adjusting its functioning to stressful situations, before, during or after these exceptional disturbances, while maintaining the functioning and quality of assistance, thus preserving its regular activities and properties. In this essay, we present some concepts about resilience in complex systems and their applications in health systems and organizations, involving the resilience of individuals, teams, and organizations. Challenges and perspectives for improving the resilient behavior of the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS) are also highlighted, a topic that has gained enormous attention in the COVID-19 pandemic. We conclude by emphasizing the need for more research on the various topics involving resilience in healthcare to strengthen the capacity of the SUS to cope with both daily challenges and future health crises.

KEYWORDS
Outcome assessment, health care; Surge capacity; Quality of health care

Introduction

The resilience of health systems is the ability to adapt that they must develop on a daily basis to adequately respond to the sudden increase in pressure of demand caused by extraordinary events (such as epidemics and other disasters that directly or indirectly affect the health of the population), while maintaining the operation, security, quality and availability of services. Therefore, resilience is a skill that must be continuously developed, and not just when crises occur, especially in the case of public systems such as the Unified Health System (SUS).

There is a certain ambiguity in the use of the term ‘resilience’, mainly when adopting it to characterize organizations, not people. In general, it is used to designate the ability to adapt to an unexpected event and return to normal when it ends11 Hollnagel E, Woods DD, Leveson N. Resilience Engineering: Concepts and Precepts. Farnham: Ashgate Pub; 2007.. With similar meanings, the term was appropriated by several areas of knowledge, from physics to psychology. However, a more comprehensive approach is needed to understand resilience as a capability of complex organizations such as health systems.

The SUS has the mission of equitably and comprehensively assisting the entire population of Brazil, a diverse country of continental dimensions, marked by historical social and regional disparities, with vast vulnerable territories that are difficult to access. In this scenario, the SUS’ ability to act is constantly put to the test, requiring all components of the system to behave resiliently, to deal with both extraordinary events and everyday stress.

Thus, this concept of everyday resilience, applied in the field of collective health, provides a theoretical perspective for understanding the aspects that strengthen the institutional capacity of public health systems. First, by bringing the focus on how the various entities that make up health systems need to deal with, respond to and adjust to stress, challenges or demands according to their capabilities. Second, allowing the incorporation of new ideas, since resilience derives from diverse epistemic domains, such as safety engineering, psychology, disaster management, among others22 Downey LE, Harris M, Jan S, et al. Global health system resilience is in everyone’s interest. BMJ. 2021; (375):n3043.,33 Kruk ME, Ling EJ, Bitton A, et al. Building resilient health systems: a proposal for a resilience index. BMJ. 2017; (357):j2323.,44 Wiig S, Aase K, Billett S, et al. Defining the boundaries and operational concepts of resilience in the resilience in healthcare research program. BMC Health Serv Res. 2020; 20(1):330.. Furthermore, this concept of resilience provides a bridge between different strategies and agendas, at different levels and contexts, favoring approaches that take into account the complexity of the functioning of public health systems44 Wiig S, Aase K, Billett S, et al. Defining the boundaries and operational concepts of resilience in the resilience in healthcare research program. BMC Health Serv Res. 2020; 20(1):330.,55 Ellis LA, Churruca K, Clay-Williams R, et al. Patterns of resilience: A scoping review and bibliometric analysis of resilient health care. Saf Sci. 2019; (118):241-57.,66 Iflaifel M, Lim RH, Ryan K, et al. Resilient Health Care: a systematic review of conceptualisations, study methods and factors that develop resilience. BMC Health Serv Res. 2020; 20(1):324..

In this essay, recent literature is explored and some fundamentals, conceptual frameworks and perspectives on resilience are discussed as an aspect for the good performance of health systems.

Epistemic reflections on health resilience

The dissemination of the concept of resilience in the field of health is quite incipient. Hollnagel77 Hollnagel E, Braithwaite J, Wears RL, editores. Resilient Health Care: The resilience of everyday clinical work. Farnham; Surrey; Burlington: Ashgate; 2015. 295 p.(19) states in the preface of his book ‘Resilient Health Care’ that “probably only a few [scholars] know for sure what [health resilience] means”. In addition, research on health resilience has still mostly focused on responding to disasters and health crises, such as epidemics and natural catastrophes88 Barasa E, Mbau R, Gilson L. What Is Resilience and How Can It Be Nurtured? A Systematic Review of Empirical Literature on Organizational Resilience. Int J Health Policy Manag. 2018; 7(6):491-503.. However, the importance of resilience for daily health activities is gradually gaining more attention22 Downey LE, Harris M, Jan S, et al. Global health system resilience is in everyone’s interest. BMJ. 2021; (375):n3043.,99 Daszak P, Keusch GT, Phelan AL, et al. Infectious Disease Threats: A Rebound To Resilience. Health Aff (Millwood). 2021; 40(2):204-11.,1010 Haldane V, De Foo C, Abdalla SM, et al. Health systems resilience in managing the COVID-19 pandemic: lessons from 28 countries. Nat Med. 2021; 27(6):964-980.,1111 Massuda A, Hone T, Leles FAG, et al. The Brazilian health system at crossroads: progress, crisis and resilience. BMJ Glob Health. 2018; 3(4):e000829..

Considering that systems are made up of their elements and interactions, and that there are models, principles and laws that can be applied to systems in general, regardless of their type or the nature of their elements1212 Von Bertalanffy L. The History and Status of General Systems Theory. Acad Manage J. 1972; 15(4):407-26., resilience can manifest itself essentially in two ways: a) as an emergent property of the functioning of the system, which emerges from a series of skills employed in its operation; b) through the components and resources of the system, which serve to describe its strength, robustness, preparedness and adaptation strategies. These components, although not determinants of resilient behavior per se, support the potential of health systems to react to the shocks to which they are subjected, regularly or extraordinarily.

These two forms are not, however, paradoxical. On the contrary, they are related, insofar as the behavior of systems depends on their composition as much as their composition must be operated in favor of resilience. This is important because as a system’s capacity to deal with endogenous situations of chronic stress strengthens, so does its functioning in the face of sudden exogenous disturbances.

In this sense, Hartwig et al.1313 Hartwig A, Clarke S, Johnson S, et al. Workplace team resilience: A systematic review and conceptual development. Organ Psychol Rev. 2020; 10(3-4):169-200. state that, in order to manifest a resilient behavior, individuals, teams and health organizations need to be fully articulated. At the individual (micro) level, Murdem et al.1414 Murden F, Bailey D, Mackenzie F, et al. The impact and effect of emotional resilience on performance: an overview for surgeons and other healthcare professionals. Br J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2018; 56(9):786-90. highlight characteristics such as personality, self-esteem, positive affect, self-awareness, flexibility and self-monitoring as factors that promote resilient behavior. As a way to enhance these characteristics in workers, health organizations can develop continuing education actions focused on problem solving, promoting reflective capacity, behavioral training, improving the quality of life at work, among others. These actions, which reinforce the importance of individual well-being for the development of organizational resilience, are much explored in the fields of ergonomics and human factors1515 Arcuri R, Bellas HC, Ferreira DS, et al. On the brink of disruption: Applying Resilience Engineering to anticipate system performance under crisis. Appl Ergon. 2022; (99):103632.,1616 Vidal MC, Carvalho P. Ergonomia Cognitiva: raciocínio e decisão no trabalho. Rio Janeiro: Virtual Científica; Faperj; 2008.,1717 Vidal MCR, Carvalho PVR, Santos MS, et al. Collective work and resilience of complex systems. J Loss Prev Process Ind. 2009; 22(4):516-27..

At the level of interprofessional health teams (meso), the collaboration capacity of its members to manage extraordinary situations is a preponderant factor in the resilience of services. In this way, inadequate or insufficient collaboration within the team can have serious consequences, such as loss of life. In addition, typical attributes of effective teams, such as trust, social support, quality of relationships between members, collaborative leadership and cohesion, have a significant impact on the resilience of health systems1818 Morgan PBC, Fletcher D, Sarkar M. Defining and characterizing team resilience in elite sport. Psychol Sport Exerc. 2013; 14(4):549-59.,1919 Saldanha MCW, Araújo LLF, Arcuri R, et al. Identifying routes and organizational practices for resilient performance: a study in the construction industry. Cogn Technol Work. 2022 [acesso em 2022 jun 19]; (24):521-535. Disponível em: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10111-022-00703-5.
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Finally, in the organizational (macro) aspect, the health system’s ability to respond effectively to demands and stressors (including natural disasters and large-scale emergencies) is directly related to maintaining the quality of care44 Wiig S, Aase K, Billett S, et al. Defining the boundaries and operational concepts of resilience in the resilience in healthcare research program. BMC Health Serv Res. 2020; 20(1):330.. In the following subsections, these two forms of manifestation of resilience in health will be explored, including the analytical frameworks most adopted in both cases.

Resilience as an emergent property of health systems

Kruk et al.33 Kruk ME, Ling EJ, Bitton A, et al. Building resilient health systems: a proposal for a resilience index. BMJ. 2017; (357):j2323. point out that the design of resilient health systems must emphasize the functions of the system, and not just its structure. These authors also point out that the search for resilience helps in the development of institutional capacity, allowing the identification of immediate and long-term demands.

Hollnagel2020 Hollnagel E. Introduction to the Resilience Analysis Grid (RAG). [acesso em 2022 jul 15]. Disponível em: https://erikhollnagel.com/onewebmedia/RAG%20Outline%20V2.pdf.
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,2121 Hollnagel E. Safety–I and Safety–II: The Past and Future of Safety Management. London: CRC Press; 2018. [acesso em 2019 abr. 11]. Disponível em: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781317059806.
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goes further. More precisely, the author relates the resilience of health systems to a higher level of institutional security, or Safety-II2222 Hollnagel E, Wears RL, Braithwaite J. From Safety--I to Safety-II: A White Paper. 2015. [acesso em 2019 abr 24]. Disponível em: http://rgdoi.net/10.13140/RG.2.1.4051.5282.
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, in which systems must be able to operate normally and mitigate the risks of disasters under variable conditions. To this end, it suggests the promotion of four skills: anticipation, monitoring, response and learning. These organizational skills have been adopted in the literature to operationalize resilience both qualitatively1515 Arcuri R, Bellas HC, Ferreira DS, et al. On the brink of disruption: Applying Resilience Engineering to anticipate system performance under crisis. Appl Ergon. 2022; (99):103632.,2323 Arcuri R, Bulhões B, Jatobá A, et al. Gatekeeper family doctors operating a decentralized referral prioritization system: Uncovering improvements in system resilience through a grounded-based approach. Saf Sci. 2020; (121):177-90.,2424 Braithwaite J, Wears RL, Hollnagel E. Resilient Health Care, Volume 3: Reconciling Work-as-Imagined and Work-as-Done. Farnham; Burlington: CRC Press; 2016. and quantitatively55 Ellis LA, Churruca K, Clay-Williams R, et al. Patterns of resilience: A scoping review and bibliometric analysis of resilient health care. Saf Sci. 2019; (118):241-57.,2020 Hollnagel E. Introduction to the Resilience Analysis Grid (RAG). [acesso em 2022 jul 15]. Disponível em: https://erikhollnagel.com/onewebmedia/RAG%20Outline%20V2.pdf.
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, including in the health field, from the perspective of patient safety, for example2525 Travassos C, Grabois V, Noronha J. Brazil: Knowledge Management for Quality Improvement in Brazil. In: Health Systems Improvement Across the Globe: Success Stories from 60 Countries. London: CRC Press; 2018.,2626 Cook R. Resilience, the Second Story, and Progress on Patient Safety. In: Hollnagel E, Braithwaite J, Wears RL, editores. Resilient Health Care. London: CRC Press; 2013..

Hollnagel’s proposal is that, in order to adequately respond to demands, both those resulting from disruptive events and those considered normal, it is necessary to leverage the system’s abilities to know what to expect, what to look for, and learn from what happened, as seen in figure 1. Such skills can be organized as system functions that, in turn, exert mutual influence (or resonance). Hollnagel also proposes a method for analyzing the resonance between system functions, the Functional Resonance Analysis Method, or FRAM2727 Hollnagel E. FRAM: The Functional Resonance Analysis Method: Modelling Complex Socio-technical Systems. London: CRC Press; 2017. [acesso em 2019 abr 9]. Disponível em: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781351935968.
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Figure 1
The four resilient abilities, organized as system functions, illustrated in FRAM notation (I: Input; O: Outputs; T: Time; C: Controls; P: Preconditions; R: Resources)

Traditional safety management in complex systems is usually reactive and oriented towards what went wrong during the occurrence of adverse events, because of risks perceived as unacceptable. Interventions generally focus on standardization, protocols, checks and barriers to make failures less likely and on correcting the consequences2929 Liberati EG, Peerally MF, Dixon-Woods M. Learning from high risk industries may not be straightforward: a qualitative study of the hierarchy of risk controls approach in healthcare. Int J Qual Health Care. 2018; 30(1):39-43.. From the perspective of resilience, the Safety-II approach shifts the focus of safety management from the exclusive consideration of adverse events, failures and forms of preventing them, to understanding and strengthening the skills that serve to continuously foster safety in everyday practice2222 Hollnagel E, Wears RL, Braithwaite J. From Safety--I to Safety-II: A White Paper. 2015. [acesso em 2019 abr 24]. Disponível em: http://rgdoi.net/10.13140/RG.2.1.4051.5282.
http://rgdoi.net/10.13140/RG.2.1.4051.52...
. These skills include, among other things, the multiple checks naturally developed by interprofessional teams, informal or tacit work practices, increasingly common in health work.

Damen et al.3030 Damen NL, Vos MS, Moesker MJ, et al. Preoperati-ve Anticoagulation Management in Everyday Clinical Practice: An International Comparative Analysis of Work-as-Done Using the Functional Resonance Analysis Method. J Patient Saf. 2021; 17(3):157-65. describe a case in which an experienced health manager uses a personal checklist to guide the perioperative period of patients, although he was not formally responsible for this task, in order to detect treatment plans that deviated from the recommended practice. From a systematic review that identified 13 studies in the field of primary care, Robertson et al.3131 Robertson H, Elliott A, Burton C, et al. Resilience of primary healthcare professionals: a systematic review | British J. Gen. Pract. Br J Gen. 2016; 66(647):e423-33. identified characteristics and factors associated with resilience. They conclude that the workspace is a key factor in daily performance and, therefore, there is a need to develop ways to assess resilience that reflect the multidimensional nature of health work. Such studies indicate that the nature of resilience is multifaceted, that is, it incorporates individual, social and work environment factors. Thus, Safety-II addresses the role of workers in promoting and maintaining a culture of resilience, in a continuous and non-normative manner, seeking to understand which acts or practices, explicit or apparently hidden, favor or hinder resilience.

Safety-II’s ideas can also be applied to the broader level of health systems functioning, not just ‘frontline’ work. Verhagen et al.3232 Verhagen MJ, Vos MS, Sujan M, et al. The problem with making Safety-II work in healthcare. BMJ Qual Saf. 2022; 31(5):402-8. provide a simplified example of resilience skills in hospital management of COVID-19 patients. As a monitoring skill, they highlight the monitoring of the relationship between the number of admitted patients with COVID-19 and the number of employees on leave due to the disease itself, as a way of predicting the impact and demands of the pandemic. The ability to respond allows changing the team’s schedules and treating non-urgent cases in outpatient units or in the community itself, in order to improve care for serious cases. The ability to anticipate involves prospecting the impact of the increase in infections on the capacity of the health system, while the ability to learn promotes reflection on how the response to previous waves was.

Thus, these examples demonstrate how resilience, as an emerging property of the functioning of health systems, refers mainly to the development of a culture, introducing aspects of quality and safety in care as objectives that must be managed together, and not separately.

Organization of components and resources of health systems in favor of resilient performance

The recent COVID-19 pandemic has brought up the need to know the operating conditions of health systems under unpredictable and changing circumstances. This was, in a way, due to the low effectiveness of some evaluative models in predicting the capacity of health systems to deal with the pandemic. In a very symbolic example, then-US President Donald Trump said, in a speech during the initial moments of the pandemic, that the US health system would have no difficulties in combating (or even eliminating) COVID-19 given its high evaluation at the Global Health Security Index (GHSI), an important tool for evaluating health systems3333 Cameron EE, Nuzzo JB, Bell JA, et al. 2019 Global Health Security Index: Building Collective Action and Accountability. USA: Nuclear Threat Initiative; 2019. [acesso em 2019 abr 9]. Disponível em: https://www.ghsindex.org.
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,3434 The Hub. Here’s the Johns Hopkins study President Trump referenced in his coronavirus news conference. The Hub. 2020 fev 27. [acesso em 2021 jan 8]. Disponível em: https://hub.jhu.edu/2020/02/27/trump-johns-hopkins-study-pandemic-coronavi-ruscovid-19-649-em0-art1-dtd-health/.
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Recently, recognizing the problems in the response to the pandemic, the United States of America raised the status of the surveillance division of the US Department of Health as a way to improve the monitoring and anticipation skills of the health system and, thus, implement faster and more effective responses to the progress of the pandemic3535 Stolberg SG, Weiland N. The Biden administration is elevating a division of H.H.S. to more broadly oversee pandemic responses. The New York Times. 2022 jul 21. [acesso em 2022 jul 21]. Disponível em: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/20/us/politics/hhs-as-pr-biden.html.
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– an adaptation to strengthen elements of the system to improve performance in resilience.

There are several initiatives that implicitly point to important components for the resilience of health systems. The GHSI model includes indicators of strength and preparedness of health systems. The World Health Organization (WHO) proposes a framework – represented in figure 2 – for the operationalization of resilient health systems in the face of the effects of climate change3636 Organização Mundial da Saúde. Operational framework for building climate resilient health systems. Geneva: Organização Mundial da Saúde; 2015. 47 p. [acesso em 2022 jun 20]. Disponível em: https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/189951.
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which, although specific, relate to the dimensions that the WHO calls ‘bricks’, or ‘building blocks’ of resilient health systems3737 Organização Mundial da Saúde. Monitoring the building blocks of health systems: a handbook of indicators and their measurement strategies. Geneva: Organização Mundial da Saúde; 2010..

Figure 2
WHO framework for operationalizing climate-resilient health systems

Strength, preparedness and response are some of the terms extensively adopted in the international literature related to the institutional capacity of health systems3838 Aminizadeh M, Farrokhi M, Ebadi A. Hospital management preparedness tools in biological events: A scoping review. J Educ Health Promot. 2019 [acesso em 2022 jun 20]; (8):234. Disponível em: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6905292/.
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,3939 Asch SM, Stoto M, Mendes M, et al. A review of instruments assessing public health preparedness. Public Health. 2005 [acesso em 2022 jun 20]; 120(5):532-542. Disponível em: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/003335490512000508.
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,4040 Avchen RN, Kosmos C, LeBlanc TT. Community Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies: Introduction and Contents of the Volume. AJPH. 2019 [acesso em 2022 jun 20]; 109(s4):s253-S255. Disponível em: https://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/abs/10.2105/AJPH.2019.305316.
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,4141 Edge JS, Hoffman SJ. Strengthening national health systems’ capacity to respond to future global pandemics. In: Davies SE, Youde JR. The Politics of Surveillance and Response to Disease Outbreaks. Reino Unido: Routledge; 2015.,4242 Keck CW, Erme MA. Strengthening the public health system. In: Terrorism and public health: a balanced approach to stregthening systems and protecting people. Oxford: University Press; 2002.,4343 Kutzin J, Sparkes SP. Health systems strengthening, universal health coverage, health security and resilience. Bull World Health Organ. 2016; 94(1):2.. This indicates, even if tacitly, not integrated or restricted, the importance of certain components for the development of the potential of health systems for resilient behavior in relation to the next crises, such as new epidemics and disease outbreaks, disasters (natural or no), progressive increase in the demand for universal access to health, mass immigration, wars, etc.

Responses to COVID-19 made it possible to identify the relationships between different aspects of health systems and resilience. Haldane et al.1010 Haldane V, De Foo C, Abdalla SM, et al. Health systems resilience in managing the COVID-19 pandemic: lessons from 28 countries. Nat Med. 2021; 27(6):964-980. identified response actions to COVID-19 based on the framework proposed by the WHO, illustrated in figure 2. In their study, they present resilient measures related to governance and financing, community engagement, provision of health care, health workforce adaptations, use of medical technologies, and functioning of public health functions.

The European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, an entity linked to the WHO, emphasizes the importance of being prepared and managing extraordinary events to which health systems are subjected as a way of strengthening everyday resilient behavior4444 Thomas S, Sagan A, Larkin J, et al. Strengthening health systems resilience: Key concepts and strategie. 2020 [acesso em 2021 jun 29]; (36). Disponível em: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK559803.
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. Some variations of this definition have greater emphasis on the aspect of health security, such as Adger’s proposal4545 Adger WN. Vulnerability. Glob Environ Change. 2006; 16(3):268-81., which considers that health systems with more resilient performance are those less exposed to the risk of being affected by extraordinary and sudden events – something also dependent on the continual development of potential for resilience. Adger’s approach highlights the aspect of risk exposure as something that is mitigated as a system becomes more resilient.

Overview and prospects for the resilient performance of the SUS

Jatobá et al.4646 Jatobá A, Bellas HC, Koster I, et al. Patient visits in poorly developed territories: a case study with community health workers. Cogn Technol Work. 2018; 20(1):125-52., when analyzing the work of community health agents in home visits, observed adaptations in the visit protocol due to the goals established by the management and the restrictions of the work environment, mainly related to access to families in violent and vulnerable communities. Arcuri et al.1515 Arcuri R, Bellas HC, Ferreira DS, et al. On the brink of disruption: Applying Resilience Engineering to anticipate system performance under crisis. Appl Ergon. 2022; (99):103632., based on modelings carried out before the pandemic, forecast difficulties faced by teams from the Mobile Emergency Care Service (SAMU-192) in Alto Solimões during the peak of COVID-19 in 2020 in the region.

Both studies demonstrate aspects of resilience and fragility in home visits and in urgent and emergency care for vulnerable populations, important and challenging functions of the SUS that are daily affected by challenges such as: demographic and epidemiological transitions and crises in governance arrangements, technical assistance models, financing restrictions, in addition to adaptations to the local social ideology about public policies, typical of developing countries4747 Harris M, Bhatti Y, Prime M, et al. Low-cost innovation in healthcare: what you find depends on where you look. J R Soc Med. 2018; 111(2):47-50.,4848 King DS. O Estado e as estruturas sociais de bem-estar em democracias industriais avançadas. Novos Estud. 1988; (22):53-76.,4949 Mendes EV. 25 anos do Sistema Único de Saúde: resultados e desafios. Estud Av. 2013; (27):27-34..

In the Brazilian case, there are still constant challenges to combat the historical under-funding of the SUS, the consequences of the economic crises and their impacts on the sustainability of the programs, judicialization and, at the community and social level, access and the guarantee of the right to health, elements that make the SUS even more susceptible to disruptive events5050 Cruz A. Agenda de eficiência para o SUS. Portal CONASS. 2016. [acesso em 2022 fev 10]. Disponível em: https://www.conass.org.br/consensus/agenda-de--eficiencia-para-o-sus/.
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Aspects such as vulnerability and social determinants of health also need to be taken into account in research on the actual functioning of the SUS5151 Costa NR. Austeridade, predominância privada e falha de governo na saúde. Ciênc. saúde coletiva. 2017; 22(4):1065-74.,5252 Costa NR, Vaitsman J. Universalization and Privatization: How Policy Analysis can Help Understand the Development of Brazil’s Health System. J Comp Policy Anal Res Pract. 2014; 16(5):441-56.,5353 Paim JS. Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS) aos 30 anos. Ciênc. saúde coletiva. 2018; 23(6):1723-8., and, consequently, the resilience of its components, functions and activities. Likewise, resilience is fundamental for the long-term sustainability of the SUS, and is also important for providing the interprofessional care necessary for its essential principles, that is, the system must be able to provide personnel, teams, organizations, support systems, financing and services that people need, when they need them, regardless of their social, economic and cultural conditions. Thus, the ability to ensure an adequate SUS response to events such as the COVID-19 pandemic for all populations, whether urban, remote, vulnerable or not, depends on the collaboration between health professionals in favor of the ability to anticipate future events, learn from experience and monitor the current context.

In this sense, initiatives to catalog and disseminate good health practices collaboratively developed by health service teams and communities are fundamental5454 Fernandes VR, Amorim AC, Silva JPV, et al. Plataforma Colaborativa IdeiaSUS/Fiocruz: experiências e práticas na parceria Conass e Conasems. In: Rangel FV, Magalhães MG, D’Oliveira CL, et al. IdeiaSUS: saberes e práticas nos territórios do Sistema Único de Saúde. Rio de Janeiro: Cebes; 2020; p. 25-46.. Understanding and multiplying successful practices promotes resilience, in the sense that it develops learning capabilities to deal with both the stress of operations under expected day-to-day conditions and unexpected situations.

SUS management can benefit from more comprehensive analysis focusing on the causes and effects of the low potential for resilience in institutional capacity5555 Khalili H, Lising D, Kolcu G, et al. Advancing health care resilience through a systems-based collaborative approach: Lessons learned from COVID-19. J Interprof Care. 2021; 35(6):809-12.. In addition, financing models, in the complex context that usually involves public policies, need to be reassessed based on the lessons learned in the face of recent crises and the consequent depletion of resources5656 Costa NR, Silva PRF, Lago MJ, et al. The institutional capacity of the Health Sector and the response to COVID-19 in a global perspective. Ciênc. saúde coletiva. 2021; (26):4645-54..

New conceptual frameworks involving the resilient abilities of health systems should promote organization and innovative forms of analysis of the global indicators adopted in the management of the SUS, such as the formulation of composite indexes that translate the systems’ potential for resilient behavior. A system with the level of complexity of the SUS will only have its potential for resilience properly represented if it is through a framework of indicators capable of aggregating its structural and functional aspects.

Conclusions

The institutional mission of the SUS is proving to be quite challenging in a scenario that points to a continuous increase in complexity, the possibility of new health crises, combined with investment restrictions caused by fiscal austerity policies, increased poverty and weakening of the public service. The COVID-19 pandemic has reminded everyone of the importance of long-term planning and scaling, as well as the need for health systems with ever-increasing potential for resilient performance. It is important for health managers to continuously assess the resilient abilities of health systems in order to enhance their strengths and mitigate existing weaknesses.

Being prepared to deal effectively with the next health crises requires systems that are increasingly capable of behaving resiliently. Anticipating gaps in preparedness, monitoring appropriate indicators, responding based on specific priorities, and learning to develop plans to guide and sustain health care delivery are crucial skills that the SUS needs to develop and maintain at all levels of complexity to ensure effective universality, equity and integrality.

  • Financial support: Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico – CNPq (proceeding 307029/2021-2 and 402670/2021-3). Fundação Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro – Faperj (proceeding E-26/201.252/2022)

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    28 Apr 2023
  • Date of issue
    Dec 2022

History

  • Received
    31 July 2022
  • Accepted
    20 Oct 2022
Centro Brasileiro de Estudos de Saúde RJ - Brazil
E-mail: revista@saudeemdebate.org.br