¿Sistemas de salud resilientes para países ya resilientes? Los discursos de la pandemia en la era post COVID-19

Juan Arroyo-Laguna Acerca del autor

Resumen

El objetivo fue reconstruir y analizar los discursos de la pandemia en la era post-COVID-19. La metodología se basó en una revisión crítica de la literatura científica sobre la pandemia, seleccionándose entre una muestra de los 500 artículos científicos más citados en Google Scholar sobre la pandemia, a 80 artículos de carácter no biomédico, clínico o farmacológico, publicados en revistas indexadas en Scopus o Web of Science. El abordaje teórico se basó en los debates sobre predictibilidad e impredecibilidad, determinación e indeterminación, en las ciencias de la salud y ciencias sociales. Como resultado se identificaron y analizaron seis tesis sobre la pandemia: a) la tesis de la impredecibilidad de las pandemias; b) la tesis negacionista de la pandemia; c) la tesis de la pandemia como falla en los sistemas de predictibilidad; d) la tesis de la prevención de eventos catastróficos con intervenciones puntuales; e) la tesis de la postergación estructural de la atención de predicciones por los países no desarrollados; y f) la tesis ecologista-sanitaria, de previsión de una fase crítica para el planeta y la humanidad. Se concluyó sobre los límites de la resiliencia como centro en la preparación de los sistemas de salud de Latinoamérica en la post-pandemia.

Palabras clave:
Vigilancia sanitaria; Gestión de desastres; Pandemia; COVID-19; Discursos sanitarios

Introducción

América Latina tiene el 8,4% de la población mundial, pero ha tenido hasta agosto del 2022 el 24% de los contagios por COVID-19 y el 28% de fallecidos por dicha causa. Otras regiones, más pobladas, tuvieron proporcionalmente menos contagios y muertes: Asia, con el 59,5% de la población mundial, tuvo el 27,9% de contagios y 22,6% de fallecidos. Europa, con el 9,6% de la población, tuvo 36,8% de contagios y 29,3% de fallecidos. Norteamérica, con el 4,7% de la población tuvo el 16,2% de contagios y 16,7% de fallecidos.

El primer caso confirmado en Latinoamérica se registró en Brasil el 26 de febrero del 2020 y el primer fallecido, en Argentina el 7 de marzo. Desde entonces hasta agosto del 2022, la región ha pagado el costo en vidas de 1 millón 711 mil fallecidos por la pandemia11 COVID-19 Data Explorer [Internet] 2022. England: Our World in Data; c2020-2022 [citado el 15 de agosto de 2022.] Disponible en: https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/daily-cases-covid-19
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/daily...
. Evidentemente el costo no ha sido igual entre todos los países latinoamericanos. Se observa en la Tabla 1 que el Perú sobresale en términos de fallecidos por COVID-19 por millón de habitantes, con una tasa de 6.366, siguiéndole Brasil y Chile, por encima de 3.000 fallecidos. Un segundo grupo está compuesto por Paraguay, Argentina, Colombia, México, Uruguay y Ecuador con tasas de mortalidad entre los 2.012 y 2.877. Un tercer grupo con tasas menores comprende a Bolivia, Costa Rica y Cuba, entre otros, por debajo de 1.800 fallecidos por millón. Sea cual fuere la variación entre países, el promedio regional es alto (2.659), por encima del de la OECD (2.137) y de otras regiones del mundo.

Tabla 1
Países latinoamericanos seleccionados: test, casos y muertes por COVID-19, marzo 2020 - agosto 2022.

¿Por qué esta desproporción en desfavor de Latinoamérica? ¿Qué hicimos mal? ¿No tenemos capacidades de gestión sanitaria ante las epidemias y pandemias? ¿Es un problema centralmente de nuestros sistemas de salud? ¿Era posible otro resultado con nuestros tipos de sociedades?

Y ahora, hacia el futuro, ¿habremos aprendido la lección? ¿Cuáles son las grandes lecciones? ¿El discurso central que emana del Norte sobre la conversión de nuestros sistemas de salud en resilientes, en adaptar lo que tenemos ante la eventualidad de nuevas pandemias, debe ser el eje de nuestras soluciones para ellas? ¿No necesitaremos entrar a una nueva batalla por las ideas sanitarias en la era post COVID-19, que permita otra lectura de lo que tenemos enfrente?

Metodología

El presente artículo revisa y discute la literatura que intenta responder a estos interrogantes, bajo la hipótesis de que el aprovechamiento de la ventana de oportunidad que significa la crisis sociosanitaria vivida depende de la evaluación de cuán predecible y afrontable se consideran estas crisis, lo que requiere evidencias, pero también de enfoques adecuados para valorarlas. Está en juego la narrativa central sobre el tipo de normalidad post-pandémica en toda Latinoamérica, que incluye a sus sistemas de salud.

El estudio se basa una revisión de la literatura científica de carácter no médico, clínico o farmacológico sobre la pandemia. Utilizando los descriptores de búsqueda generales como: <pandemic COVID-19>, <SARS-CoV-2>, <coronavirus> se encontraron 437.000 resultados en Google Scholar, 150.804 en PubMed y 28.428 en Science Direct, desde el año 2020 a agosto del 2022. El análisis de una muestra de los 500 artículos científicos más citados en Google Scholar reveló que la mayor parte de la producción global sobre la pandemia (84%) es de carácter biomédico. El 16% restante busca una interpretación más global de lo sucedido y pistas de políticas públicas hacia adelante. La revisión crítica de estos 80 artículos científicos, editoriales y comentarios en revistas indexadas en Scopus o Web of Science ha sido el material de base, para la presente reflexión sobre el estado de la cuestión.

Resultados

La literatura sobre la pandemia y el espectro de lo predecible e impredecible

Desde los primeros casos en Wuhan ha habido mucha producción científica sobre el COVID-19, la mayoría desde la virología, biología molecular, ingeniería genética, medicina clínica y medicina veterinaria. Pero ha habido también lecturas más panorámicas de la pandemia provenientes de la epidemiología, salud pública, ciencias sociales y humanidades, y estas lecturas pueden clasificarse en un continuo entre dos extremos: desde la teoría del Cisne Negro o impacto de lo altamente improbable de Taleb22 Taleb NN. El Cisne Negro: El impacto de lo altamente improbable. Barcelona: Paidós; 2008., hasta las teorías ecologistas-salubristas, que han terminado en la propuesta de Una Sola Salud o articulación entre la medicina humana, la medicina veterinaria y la ecología33 Schwabe CW. Veterinary Medicine and Human Health. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 1984.,44 Dente MG, Riccardo F, Declich S, Milano A, Robbiati C, Agrimi U, Mantovani A, Morabito S, Scavia G, Cubadda F, Villa L, Monaco M, Mancini L, Carere M, Marcheggiani S, Lavazza A, Farina M, Dar O, Villa M, Testori Coggi P, Brusaferro S. Strengthening preparedness against global health threats: a paradigm shift. One Health 2022; 14:100396..

Estos escritos más generales sobre la pandemia se podrían clasificar en seis tesis de lo sucedido: a) la impredecibilidad de las pandemias; b) el negacionismo de la pandemia; c) la pandemia como falla en los sistemas de predictibilidad; d) la prevención posible de eventos catastróficos con intervenciones focalizadas sobre las variables críticas; e) la postergación estructural de la atención de las predicciones por los países no desarrollados; y f) la ecologista-sanitaria, de previsión de una fase crítica para el planeta y la humanidad.

Es evidente que no hay fronteras precisas entre estas aproximaciones a la pandemia y se dan muchas mezclas, pero la ubicación en alguno de estos posicionamientos tiene obvias implicancias sobre lo que se proponga hacia adelante.

La impredecibilidad o el caso fortuito

La tesis de la impredecibilidad es la del azar en la historia, entendida como una sucesión de cisnes negros o eventos raros, de alto impacto e imprevisibles. Es cierto que estamos de retorno de las comprensiones racionalistas deterministas que dominaron buena parte de los siglos XIX y XX. El conductismo estaba dando cuenta desde Khaneman55 Kahneman D. Pensar rápido, pensar despacio. Barcelona: Penguin Random House; 2014., Thaler et al.66 Thaler RH, Sunstein CR. Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness. London: Yale University Press; 2009. y Akerlof et al.77 Akerlof G, Shiller R. Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy, and Why It Matters for Global Capitalism. New Jersey: Princeton University Press; 2009., de los últimos resabios del homo economicus, planteado como predecible según el cálculo de sus intereses. Pero este reenfoque entre lo racional y lo intuitivo, entre lo estructurado y semiestructurado o desestructurado, no implica la indeterminación.

Los estudios que se autolimitan a la búsqueda del “caso cero” en el mercado de Huanan, se acercan a la tesis de la impredecibilidad o contagio aleatorio, bajo el supuesto de la existencia de eventos de infecciones sin determinantes atrás. La exaltación estos dos últimos años por parte de ciertos seguidores de un tropicalismo tradicional ha intentado centrar el tema en los detalles de los primeros casos en el lado sur-oeste del mercado de Huanan y perdido así de vista el conjunto88 Maxmen A. Wuhan market was epicentre of pandemic's start, studies suggest. Nature 2022; 603(7899):15-16.,99 Worobey M, Levy JI, Malpica Serrano L, Crits-Christoph A, Pekar JE, Goldstein SA, Rasmussen AL, Kraemer MUG, Newman C, Koopmans MPG, Suchard MA, Wertheim JO, Lemey P, Robertson DL, Garry RF, Holmes EC, Rambaut A, Andersen KG. The Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan was the early epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic. Science 2022; 377(6609):951-959.. Según esto, en un acto hipotéticamente fortuito un virus que coexistió miles de años con los murciélagos pasó a los humanos. Pero dicha trasmisión, si no hubiera sido en Wuhan hubiera sido en cualquier otro sitio del planeta, porque la multiplicación de las zoonosis es el síntoma de nuestro tiempo. El asunto es por qué.

El negacionismo de la pandemia

Fue relativamente fácil que se pasase de la tesis del SARS-CoV-2 como un suceso raro e impredecible a la negación de su existencia real o de su gravedad o incluso a la tesis de facilitar la “inmunidad de rebaño”1010 Ashton J. COVID-19 and herd immunity. JRSM 2022; 115(2):76-77.,1111 Jung F, Krieger V, Hufert FT, Küpper JH. Herd immunity or suppression strategy to combat COVID-19. Clin Hemorheol Microcirc 2020; 75(1):13-17..

Así se abrieron tres años de negacionismo de la intervención pública, en supuesta defensa del individuo. Los gobiernos conservadores dejaron que inicialmente se extendiera el virus sin restricciones, postergándose medidas de distanciamiento social o inmovilización1212 Bourgeron T. 'Let the virus spread'. A doctrine of pandemic management for the libertarian-authoritarian capital accumulation regime. Organization 2021; 29(3):401-413.. Esta retórica planteaba una pretensión moral de libertad sin responsabilidad1313 Bustamente T, Hübner Mendes C. Freedom without responsibility: the promise of Bolsonaro's COVID-19 denial. Jus Cogens 2021; 3:181-207.. Una vez más estábamos ante el dilema de la acción colectiva o tragedia de los comunes en sociedades con primacía de los intereses individuales: no existen bienes públicos, ni por tanto salud pública o colectiva.

Sea con la tesis de que el COVID-19 era fruto de alguna conspiración, o que la comunidad científica estaba equivocada, o que el coronavirus no tenía la gravedad que se le adjudicaba, o que no eran necesarias mascarillas ni cuarentenas ni vacunas, países como Estados Unidos, Inglaterra, Brasil, Argentina, México, quedaron inermes un tiempo ante la pandemia1414 Douglass K. Covid-19 conspiracy theories. Group Process Intergroup Relat 2021; 24(2):270-275,

15 Uscinski JE, Klofstad C, Funchion J, Wuchty S, Murthi M, Enders AM, Seelig M, Everett C, Premaratne K. Why do people believe COVID-19 conspiracy theories? Harv Kennedy Sch Misinformaton Rev 2020; 1(spe.):1-12.
-1616 Herrera-Peco I, Jiménez-Gómez B, Romero Magdalena CS, Deudero JJ, García-Puente MG, Benítez de Gracia E, Ruiz Núñez C. Antivaccine movement and COVID-19 negationism: a content analysis of Spanish-written messages on Twitter. Vaccines (Basel) 2021; 9(6):656.. Como dice Paviotti1717 Paviotti A. God and COVID-19 in Burundian social media: the political fight for the control of the narrative. J African Media Studies 2021; 13(3):385-397., en este contexto de fake news, miedos, especulaciones y desinformación, se estableció otra batalla: la lucha política por el control de la narrativa.

Las fallas de los sistemas de predictibilidad

La mayor parte de la literatura se ha abocado a examinar pragmáticamente las fallas en la detección temprana de la pandemia. Desde esta mirada de la pandemia, se trata de una falla de gestión de muchos gobiernos, de las que ciertamente ha habido numerosas antes. Y han costado muchas vidas: toda demora, omisión y decisión errónea, se traduce, en una crisis, en morbimortalidad evitable masiva.

La demora de 71 días por el Comité de Emergencias de la OMS para declarar la pandemia ha quedado en la memoria de los especialistas y autoridades de salud pública del mundo, como una de las cosas que no se pueden repetir. Han empezado a rediscutirse las regulaciones internacionales en salud que definen los pasos para reportar pandemias y disponen medidas de control. Ha quedado la sensación de que es necesario un nuevo “tratado sobre las pandemias”1818 Hannon E, Hanbali L, Lehtimaki S, Schwalbe N. Why we still need a pandemic treaty. Lancet Glob Health 2022; 10(9):E1232-E1233., cuyo borrador se ha anunciado para el 2024, demasiado lejos.

La pandemia del COVID-19 desnudó décadas de debilitamiento del Estado y su incapacidad de gestión de riesgos dada la inexistencia práctica de anticipación y planificación. No se advirtió la incorporación de Latinoamérica a la era global de las pandemias, porque ésta no es la primera pandemia. A propósito del coronavirus, la sociedad global recordó las pandemias del siglo XX y XXI, aunque no se aprendieron muchas lecciones de las anteriores.

En realidad, los grandes sucesos en la historia siempre se preanuncian por precursores sin que nadie les haga caso. Todavía resuenan en nuestros oídos las advertencias tempranas de Laurie Garrett: “Mientras la raza humana lucha contra sí misma, luchando por un territorio cada vez más poblado y recursos más escasos, las ventajas se trasladan al campo de los microbios. Son depredadores y saldrán victoriosos si nosotros, el Homo sapiens, no aprendemos a vivir en una aldea global racional”1919 Garret L. The coming plague: newly emerging diseases in a world out of balance. New York: Farrar Straus Giroux; 1994.. Osterholm2020 Osterholm M. Preparing for the next pandemic. Foreing Affairs 2005; 84(4):24-37. advirtió que se estaba acabando el tiempo para prepararnos para una pandemia. Webster2121 Webster RG. Flu Hunter: unlocking the secrets of a virus. Dunedin: Otago University Press; 2018. predijo dos años antes que solo era cuestión de tiempo para presenciar otra pandemia mortal y perturbadora. Casi todos los responsables de estudiar desastres y emergencias globales sabían y anunciaban que se venía una pandemia2222 Soucheray S. Experts review 1918 pandemic, warn flu is global threat [Internet]. 2018. [citado 2022 ago 3] Disponible en: https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2018/05/experts-review-1918-pandemic-warn-flu-global-threat
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. Los primeros fueron los ecologistas y hoy resulta claro que su mensaje precursor era acertado. La zoonosis de la que deriva el SARS-CoV-2 es, para una buena parte de la literatura especializada, una reacción a un arrinconamiento exacerbado del planeta2323 Arroyo J. La revancha de Higea. Crónica de una pelea en desventaja. In: Tanaka M, compilador. El desafío del buen gobierno. Intersecciones entre academia, política y gestión pública. Lima: Fondo Editorial PUCP; 2022. p. 135-156..

En cuanto a Latinoamérica se refiere, la demora en ponerse plenamente en acción fue de dos meses pues los primeros casos de COVID-19 fueron advertidos a fines de febrero y sobre todo en marzo del 2020 y ahí despertó la región. Todo lo anterior fue un ritmo de espera y una muy débil preparación, salvo excepciones. Pero entre la primera y segunda quincena de marzo, cuando comenzaron los contagios y muertes, como en un dominó, todos los países cerraron sus fronteras y tomaron medidas de emergencia e inmovilización obligatoria o cuarentenas. Argentina el 11 de marzo entró en estado de emergencia o estado de excepción, Colombia y Bolivia el 12 de marzo, Perú el 15 de marzo, Costa Rica el 16 de marzo, Brasil el 20 de marzo, y México el 30 de marzo2424 PNUD América Latina. Cronología de la respuesta de política durante la pandemia del COVID-19 en América Latina y el Caribe. Panamá: PNUD; 2022.. Los países se cerraron y los gobiernos y sistemas de salud latinoamericanos dieron en esa quincena un giro brusco. Es más, muchos signos de alarma previos de esos dos meses ahora se saben fueron minimizados u obviados. Recién se descubren muchos casos presentados en febrero, no notificados ni estudiados.

Hay una vasta producción escrita sobre la debilidad de los sistemas de alerta temprana de los ministerios y gobiernos, como veremos2525 Lupien P, Rincón A, Carrera F, Lagos G. Early COVID-19 policy responses in Latin America: a comparative analysis of social protection and health policy. Can J Lat Am Caribb Stud 2021; 46(2):297-317.. Efectivamente ha habido desatención. ¿Pero es sólo la de esos dos meses nada más?

El problema con este tipo de literatura es que considera las emergencias sanitarias como hipos periódicos de una sociedad normal. No hay que corregir la sociedad sino el hipo. No se pregunta por qué la reincidencia de estas mismas emergencias, y si los sistemas de vigilancia están para apoyar la resolución de los temas o más bien para paliarlos y postergarlos para la próxima ocasión. Por eso actúan proactivamente para emergencias que consideran naturalmente repetibles. El problema es, dado el contexto global actual y la precariedad de la mayoría de las sociedades y sistemas de salud latinoamericanos, ¿no vivimos casi en una emergencia sanitaria continua, convertida en nuestra normalidad?

La posibilidad de prevenir eventos catastróficos com intervenciones puntuales

Otro tipo de literatura busca generar evidencia con el fin de prevenir próximas eventualidades, con el refuerzo de los sistemas de salud y los entornos societales. Para ello se han multiplicado los estudios sobre las combinaciones de variables, indicadores y categorías explicativas de los dos grandes resultados de la pandemia, los contagios y los fallecidos por COVID-19. Entre ellos, están los estudios de Acosta2626 Acosta LD. Capacidad de respuesta frente a la pandemia de COVID-19 en América Latina y el Caribe. Pan Am J Public Health 2020; 44:e109., García, Alarcón et al.2727 García PJ, Alarcón A, Bayer A, Buss P, Guerra G, Ribeiro H. COVID-19 response in Latin America. Am J Trop Med Hyg 2020; 103(5):1765-1772., Schwalb et al.2828 Schwalb A, Armyra E, Méndez-Aranda M, Ugarte-Gil C. COVID-19 in Latin America and the Caribbean: two years of the pandemic. J Intern Med 2022; 292(3):409-427. y Cid et al.2929 Cid C, Marinho ML. Dos años de pandemia de COVID-19 en América Latina y el Caribe: reflexiones para avanzar hacia sistemas de salud y de protección social universales, integrales, sostenibles y resilientes. Santiago: CEPAL; 2022. El valor de esta literatura última es que, además de capturar las variables críticas hacia atrás, permite priorizar hacia adelante dónde enfatizar las intervenciones para que no se repita lo sucedido. El interrogante es si un abanico de intervenciones puntuales garantiza la no repetición de sucesos sistémicos.

La postergación estructural de la atención de predicciones por los países no desarrollados

Esta tesis desborda a las anteriores en tanto los decisores ya no se proponen atender los pronósticos, cuando los hay. Se trata de autoridades y gestores de sociedades desprotegidas, con sistemas de salud precarios, esto es, la mayoría de los países de Latinoamérica.

Se sabe lo que se viene, pero no se actúa en consecuencia. Se procede así al manejo retórico de situaciones de exclusión sanitaria, siendo normal la no aplicación de la ley de manera intencional y revocable. El concepto de forbearance de Holland3030 Holland AC. Forbearance. Am Polit Sci Rev 2016; 110(2):232-246., explica este “incumplimiento normalmente tolerado”. En América Latina el forbearence se emparenta con la omisión como política. De acuerdo con McConnell et al.3131 McConnell A, Hart Paul't. Inaction and public policy: understanding why policymakers 'do nothing'. Policy Sci 2019; 52:645-661., el estudio de las políticas públicas ha estado caracterizado por un sesgo hacia el estudio de la actividad estatal, más no se ha centrado en el análisis de su inactividad. En muchos países del sur, el Estado conoce las brechas que no le permiten garantizar los derechos a su población y por eso, permite una cultura política de “incumplimiento consentido”. Por eso mismo la resiliencia de los sistemas de salud no bastará para las próximas crisis.

Porque en Latinoamérica la pandemia derrotó no sólo a los sistemas de salud, sino al modelo histórico de sociedades iberoamericanas sin regímenes de protección social universales3232 Cecchini S. Protección social universal en América Latina y el Caribe. Santiago de Chile: ONU; 2019.,3333 Bizberg I. Latin American health regimes in the face of the pandemic. Revue Interventions Économiques 2022; 67:478-507.. Los sistemas de salud de la región no están organizados en términos prácticos según el principio de Salud para Todos, sino de Salud para Algunos3434 Mazzucato M, Ghosh J. An effective pandemic response must be truly global [Internet]. 2022. [citado 2022 ago 22]. Disponible en: https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/g20-world-bank-ineffective-approach-to-pandemic-preparedness-by-mariana-mazzucato-and-jayati-ghosh-2022-07
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. Hay un déficit permanente de oferta accesible para toda la población, que expresa un nivel de exclusión permitido y es parte del mecanismo de reproducción de la vieja normalidad. Esta subcobertura se expresa en el sobre-desgaste de la población, laboral o informal, y por tanto en un exceso de morbimortalidad evitable y pérdida de años de vida saludables desde antes de la pandemia.

A esos sistemas de salud, se les pidió en la pandemia resolver el problema que los estados y gobiernos no habían podido o querido resolver durante décadas. La mayoría de los países tenía sociedades y sistemas de salud precarios. Dado que los países latinoamericanos tienen modelos diferentes de reproducción, éstos se organizan alrededor de puntos de equilibro o de desequilibrio diversos, con niveles de fuerzas centrípetas y centrífugas variables, promedios de desgaste o sobre desgaste variables, existiendo así países protegidos, semi-protegidos y desprotegidos, países de alta, mediana y baja resiliencia, países más o menos letales y contagiosos, desde antes de la pandemia.

Y todo ello se expresó en la pandemia. El “binomio sociedad-sistema de salud” decidió en buena medida el volumen de contagios y el exceso de mortalidad. Se desprende de las cifras de la Tabla 2 que los países con niveles de pobreza mayores, con altos niveles de informalidad, con porcentajes elevados de sus riquezas concentrados en sus quintiles superiores, sin agua de calidad segura, entre otras variables societales, estaban predestinados al fracaso. Y viceversa.

Tabla 2
Variables sociales de países latinoamericanos seleccionados, en prepandemia y en pandemia.

Hacia marzo del 2020 los gobiernos encargaron a sus sistemas de salud salvar a sus sociedades. Pero la mayoría de éstos, como se observa en la Tabla 3, llegó a la pandemia con escasos recursos, con un gasto público bajo y un gasto de bolsillo elevado. Este último estaba en promedio en 32% del gasto total en salud el 2019, mientras era del 21% en la OCDE. El gasto público per cápita solo en los casos de Costa Rica, Panamá, Cuba y Uruguay superaba los 700 dólares anuales y había muchos países en rangos entre 100 y 300 dólares por año. El gasto público en salud respecto al PBI variaba en la mayoría de los casos entre 3% y 6%. Las tasas de médicos, enfermeros y camas tampoco superaban los estándares de la OMS. No sorprende entonces que la región, con el 8,4% de la población, haya producido el 15,3% del exceso de mortalidad global. Encima la pandemia incrementó la cifra de pobres el 2020 a 204 millones y de pobres extremos a 81 millones, y elevó el coeficiente de Gini en 0,7 como promedio regional del 2019 al 20203535 Arena de Mesa A. Las debilidades estructurales de los sistemas de salud de América Latina a la luz de la pandemia: la urgencia de avanzar hacia sistemas de salud universales, integrales y sostenibles [Internet]. 2022. [citado 2022 ago 3]. Disponible en: https://www.cepal.org/sites/default/files/presentations/presentacion_alberto_arenas_de_mesa.pdf
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. Fue un círculo vicioso: la desigualdad agravó la pandemia, y ésta generó aún más desigualdad.

Los gobiernos fueron tan conscientes del déficit de oferta que, en marzo del 2020, trataron de cubrir apuradamente la brecha de recursos para reforzar sus servicios, aunque era muy tarde. Hubo un gran viraje tratando de hacer en meses lo que se había descuidado en décadas.

Todo hacía falta, en todos. Todos eran resilientes desde antes de la pandemia, porque parte de su trabajo era gerenciar la escasez, hasta donde se podía. Ahora, pensadores desde el Norte, desde los países con Estados de Bienestar o con mejores sistemas de salud, les piden a los sistemas de salud latinos más resiliencia aún3636 Haldane V, De Foo C, Abdalla SM, Jung AS, Tan M, Wu S, Chua A, Verma M, Shrestha P, Singh S, Perez T, Tan SM, Bartos M, Mabuchi S, Bonk M, McNab C, Werner GK, Panjabi R, Nordström A, Legido-Quigley H. Health systems resilience in managing the COVID-19 pandemic: lessons from 28 countries. Nat Med 2021; 27(5):964-980.,3737 Forman R, Azzopardi-Muscat N, Kirkby V, Lessof S, Limaro Nathan N, Pastorino G, Permanand G, van Schalkwyk MC, Torbica A, Busse R, Figueras J, McKee M, Mossialos E. Drawing light from the pandemic: rethinking strategies for health policy and beyond. Health Policy 2022; 126(1):1-6..

La gestión sanitaria de la pandemia fue un momento excepcional de la vida de los sistemas de salud, con algunas de las siguientes características:

El Estado, largamente vituperado, pasó al primer plano y mostró que debía conducir la respuesta a la pandemia.

Se despertó del letargo de la Nueva Gestión Pública, de su fraccionamiento de lo estatal con la división de funciones, del largo bloqueo de la coordinación, y de su cultivo de lo privado como naturalmente lo mejor.

La vieja maquinaria pública se exigió al máximo y dio origen a una etapa de gran productivismo.

Creció la fuerza de trabajo en salud, con la integración masiva de nuevos recursos humanos, incluyendo estudiantes de últimos años.

Pese a contarse en la mayoría de los casos con niveles de atención primaria dañados, el personal de base asumió los tamizajes tempranos y luego las vacunaciones, y se quebró por un lapso el intra-muralismo y la atención a la demanda.

En países con ciertos niveles de digitalización, se expandió el teletrabajo y el trabajo híbrido, presencial y virtual; donde no lo había, empezó el aprendizaje nacional de lo digital a marcha forzada. La pandemia expandió fuertemente la digitalización y el ancho de internet (Tabla 3).

Tabla 3
Recursos de los sistemas de salud de países latinoamericanos seleccionados, pre y en pandemia.

La situación obligó la reparación de cadenas de aprovisionamiento, crónicamente débiles o quebradas, con periodos de desabastecimiento de insumos y medicamentos, superándose de paso la lógica eficientista del just in time, para pasar a una provisión con mayores márgenes.

Los servicios asumieron una política de sobre-explotación masiva del trabajo presencial, pero en muchos casos, también, el personal de salud se sumergió en una autoexplotación masiva voluntaria, con el consiguiente burn out y problemas de salud mental.

Si bien hubo algunos países que extendieron legalmente la jornada laboral del personal de salud, la mayoría de los profesionales y trabajadores de salud entendió que era una emergencia, e hicieron lo propio.

Se trató de una etapa especial de desprotección relativa de los recursos humanos en salud, para proteger de emergencia a sus sociedades.

Reapareció con más fuerza el cuidado doméstico de la salud y la sociedad paliativa, todavía bajo rol femenino, y el formato de la familia como unidad de resiliencia central.

Fue un acto de generosidad masiva el que millones de profesionales y trabajadores de salud de Latinoamérica cargaran con la deuda social y sanitaria generada y pasaran, en cumplimiento de su deber, a la primera línea de batalla, dando su cuota de sacrificio para compensar el “descuido estructural o histórico”. La OMS estimó que entre enero del 2020 y mayo del 2021 habían muerto entre 80.000 y 180.000 trabajadores por COVID-19, confluyendo en una cifra promedio de 115.000 muertos3838 World Health Organization (WHO). Health and Care Worker Deaths during COVID-19 [Internet]. 2021. [citado 2022 ago 23]. Disponible en: https://covid19.who.int/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIsv7SgOLq-gIVWNnVCh0n2A-KEAAYASACEgIp6vD_BwE
https://covid19.who.int/?gclid=EAIaIQobC...
. Una buena parte de ellos, latinoamericanos.

La predicción ecologista-sanitaria

Felizmente estos no han sido los únicos mensajes globales surgidos en este momentum de creación del futuro post-pandémico. Mucha más promesa para Latinoamérica y la humanidad contiene la posibilidad de una lectura ecologista-sanitaria de lo sucedido. Los animales y humanos compartimos cerca de 300 enfermedades y un 60% de las enfermedades infecciosas humanas conocidas son de origen animal (domésticos o salvajes)3939 Soto S. One Health (una sola salud) o cómo lograr a la vez una salud óptima para las personas, los animales y nuestro planeta [Internet]. 2021. [citado 2022 ago 23]. Disponible en: https://www.isglobal.org/healthisglobal/-/custom-blog-portlet/one-health-una-sola-salud-o-como-lograr-a-la-vez-una-salud-optima-para-las-personas-los-animales-y-nuestro-planeta/90586/0#:~:text=M%C3%A1s%20espec%C3%ADficamente%2C%20el%20concepto%20de,animales%20y%20nuestro%20medio%20ambiente%E2%80%9D
https://www.isglobal.org/healthisglobal/...
. Por eso hoy se abre paso en la salud pública mundial la convicción de que, de ahora en adelante, se van a tener que estudiar conjuntamente la salud humana, salud animal y los ecosistemas, bajo el nuevo concepto de «Una Salud». Lo dijeron precursoramente Steele4040 Schultz MG. In memoriam: James Harlan Steele (1913-2013). Emerg Infect Dis 2014; 20(3):514-515. y Schwabe4141 Schwabe CW. Veterinary medicine and human health. Baltimore: Ed. Williams & Wilkins; 1984.. Y desde entonces el calentamiento global ha modificado aún más la epidemiología de las enfermedades zoonóticas y alterado las interacciones entre los hosts, vectores y agentes patógenos4242 Rupasinghe R, Chomel BB, Martínez-López B. Climate change and zoonoses: a review of the current status, knowledge gaps, and future trends. Acta Trop 2022; 226:106225.. La salud humana y la medicina veterinaria están ya y estarán muy ligadas.

Sin embargo, el planteamiento ecologista-sanitaria va más allá de las zoonosis, por la crisis planetaria multidimensional que vivimos. Coloca en el centro la crítica al modelo de producción y de sociedad basada en el uso intensivo de recursos, el consumismo y el privilegio de la eficiencia como métrica de vida. Muchas de las construcciones previas en el campo de la salud, como la promoción de la salud, determinantes sociales, prevención y atención primaria, teorías del cuidado, estilos saludables de vida, entre otras, empatan parcialmente con las teorías ecologistas, pero los sistemas de salud solo podrán superar su rol asignado de reparadores de daños, cada vez más imposible de cumplir en estos nuevos tiempos, si fusionan su acervo en este framework más amplio de la vida en armonía entre la humanidad y el planeta4343 Latour B. Nunca fuimos modernos. Ensayos de antropología simétrica. Buenos Aires: Siglo veintiuno editores; 1991.. En este vínculo preliminar entre el ecologismo y la salud pública o colectiva, las filosofías de la salud casi no han entrado al debate, salvo contadas excepciones4444 Basile G, Feo Istúriz O. Hacia una epistemología de refundación de los sistemas de salud en el siglo XXI: aportes para la descolonización de teorías, políticas y prácticas. Rev Nacional Salud Publica 2022; 40(2):e349879..

Hay que mirar a la post-pandemia no como una simple restauración de los dilemas anteriores entre neoliberalismo y salud colectiva, porque ha abierto más la agenda sanitaria del futuro: a) La colosal crisis sanitaria fue también un gran momento de un resurgimiento de expresiones libres de la naturaleza en todas las ciudades del mundo en cuarentena, casi como un adelanto de cómo sería el planeta sin todo el “ruido” de nuestra presencia: “La fauna recoloniza la ciudad ante el confinamiento por el coronavirus”, exclamaba la prensa mundial en marzo del 20204545 Cerrillo A. La fauna recoloniza la ciudad ante el confinamiento por el coronavirus [Internet]. 2020. [citado 2022 ago 3]. Disponible en: https://www.lavanguardia.com/natural/20200324/4874402309/animales-ciudades-confinamiento-imagenes-curiosas.html
https://www.lavanguardia.com/natural/202...
. b) Fue también una gran ocasión para manifestaciones de una nueva convivencia social, forzada por la necesidad de la sobrevivencia, pero igualmente desinteresada. Y c) una etapa de aprendizaje global de una cultura neo-higienista, obligada por el contagio, pero proyectable ahora como propuesta post-pandémica en términos de políticas públicas de ordenamiento territorial, zonificaciones urbanas pro-verdes, viviendas ventiladas, transporte decente, espacios amplios para el tiempo libre y otra sociabilidad cotidiana4646 Santos AMSP, Vasques PHP. Pandemic, hygienism and basic sanitation: a reading of urban policy in times of COVID-19. Rev Direito Cidade 2021; 13(2):866-900..

Discusión

La revisión crítica de la literatura que hemos hecho sobre las diferentes miradas sobre la pandemia tiene implicancia prospectiva sobre los sistemas de salud del futuro. Las tesis a) del cisne negro y la b) negacionista, son las más dañinas para la salud; las tesis c) sobre fallas en los sistemas de vigilancia en salud y d) sobre intervenciones focalizadas, parecen encerrar, con sus límites, parte de las soluciones; pero las tesis e) sobre la postergación estructural para atender predicciones anunciadas, y f) sobre la previsión ecologista-sanitaria de la apertura de una fase crítica para el planeta, parecen encerrar la médula del problema y sus soluciones.

En los tiempos pre-pandemia la agresividad del modelo económico había reposicionado a los sistemas de salud como centralmente curativos, si bien con niveles diferentes de trabajo preventivo-promocional según los países. Pero cuando el gasto público en salud es mínimo, incluso deja de pagar la reparación del conjunto y descrema la franja que le es útil, escenario en el que estábamos. Éste era el curso real de las cosas, la política pública real de salud en muchos países, no en todos, mientras la política pública formal se llenaba de una retórica por principios, al mismo tiempo que la multiplicación de innovaciones superpuestas desorganizaba la práctica de los sistemas y servicios latinoamericanos. Se formaban así sistemas híbridos confusos, reformas infinitas y modernizaciones superficiales.

El problema nuevo es que el cambio climático se ha añadido en la balanza, en contra, y en ese contexto de economías productoras de desastres y pandemias, el contrapeso efectivo de los viejos sistemas de salud reparadores al paso, puede aún ser menor. Lo que implica que hay que terminar esta etapa y volver a modelos claros de organización y financiamiento hacia el universalismo. En este contexto la preparación de la próxima pandemia no puede ser, entonces, sólo un problema de resiliencia.

Por último, Latinoamérica tuvo muchos errores, pero finalmente se posicionó mayoritariamente en el concierto global de enfoques sobre ética y justicia social que se pusieron en juego ante la pandemia. Para defenderse de la pandemia debió rechazar la solución anarco-liberal del individualismo extremo, que ya no era la de los liberales clásicos, amigos de los checks and balances, sino la de Ayn Rand, que condena el altruismo como irracional y alienta la moral del individuo como el valor absoluto. Podemos imaginarnos las implicancias neomalthusianas de este planteamiento en medio de la pandemia. Lamentablemente Latinoamérica no había construido la solución europea de un gran prestador y garante de la salud, como los regímenes de bienestar que fundaron décadas atrás Marshall, Titmuss y Beveridge, pese a ser el camino más afín a nuestro universalismo en salud. Por eso, ya en medio de la crisis, los gobiernos asumieron la defensa humanitaria y social de las poblaciones respaldándose pragmáticamente en la solución benthamiana de la gerencia de crisis y las soluciones ex-post, las únicas posibles ya en medio de la batalla, si bien tienen menos techo para las crisis sistémicas que se vienen. Esto, mientras otros pueblos apelaban centralmente a Hobbes y al Leviatán, como los países asiáticos.

Por encima de todo, empero, la movilización global por salir de la pandemia se levantó sobre el cimiento kantiano de la defensa irrestricta de la dignidad humana sea cual fuese la edad o la procedencia étnica, de género o social, principio que ha sido el organizador de la respuesta mundial a la pandemia. Era la primera vez de una acción mundial de estas dimensiones.

Toca a Latinoamérica, la región que más sufrió y una de las que más luchó, porque no tuvo tantas experiencias previas como Asia u otras regiones, organizar su mensaje a la salud pública global contemporánea, que deberá venir en clave ecológico-sanitaria, multicultural, feminista y descolonizadora. Porque se terminó el mundo de una sola voz. Esa es la importancia del momento para la región.

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  • Erratum

    p. 2993-3001
    Where it reads:
    Introduction

    COVID-19 caused irreparable damage to various sectors of society and is considered the greatest health challenge of the past 100 years1. Furthermore, the high capacity for adaptive mutations of the etiologic agent, the Sars-CoV-2 virus, and the emergence of new variants heighten the uncertainties regarding vaccine coverage and the end stage of the pandemic2.

    In 2020, the first year of the pandemic, guidelines issued by Brazil’s national health surveillance agency (Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária, ANVISA)3 recommended that the main measures to be taken in dental services include suspending elective care, placing restrictions on emergency care, applying new biosecurity protocols and acquiring personal protective equipment (PPE), such as face shields and N95 or similar masks, as well as encouraging teleworking, distancing in waiting rooms and others3.

    In private dental practice, it is up to the dental employer or employee to make organisational decisions and changes, and to purchase the necessary PPE for safe care. These professionals were directly affected by the suspension of elective treatment: their earnings depend daily on their performance in carrying out procedures to maintain the profitability of their establishments4. The biosafety measures to be taken5 entailed higher expenses and economic consequences of major concern to the profession6-8.

    COVID-19 brought diverse changes to the global scenario and had strong impact on dental practice, especially during the first year of the pandemic9. Also, private sector dentists10 have shown greater emotional impairment than those in the public sector9-11, possibly due to the numerous uncertainties and insecurity of employment in the private sector.

    In view of the atypical problems experienced by these professionals and the concept of occupational stress (which can be defined as a physiological and psychological response to pressures and demands unrelated to workers’ knowledge and skills12), it became important to identify possible factors causing job stress in the private sector during the pandemic period. Accordingly, this study examined for individual and organisational factors associated with occupational stress among dentists working in the private sector in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil.

    Methods

    This cross-sectional study used data from a multicentre, observational, cross-sectional study to evaluate the COVID-19 prevention and control measures adopted by dental surgeons, technicians and oral health assistants in Brazil’s southern states (Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul) in response to the ANVISA recommendations for health services. Data for Paraná were obtained under the responsibility of the Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa and the Universidade Federal do Paraná. The study was approved by the research ethics committees of the Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa (CAAE certificate: 31720920.5.1001.0105, opinion 4,024,593) and the Universidade Federal do Paraná (CAAE certificate: 31720920.5.3001.0102, opinion 4,312,933).

    The design followed a methodological framework for online studies (websurveys), within the limitations of a non-probabilistic, convenience sample. The research and reporting of results were guided by the Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys (CHERRIES)13.

    A research form of open and closed questions was drawn up, subjected to face and content validation, assessment by eight experts in the field and a pilot study with oral health professionals from states not participating in the research. The construction and validation of the data collection instrument used for this research are described in detail in another publication14.

    The questionnaire was organised on the Google Forms platform and the link to participate was sent out by email by the regional boards of dentistry (Conselhos Regionais de Odontologia, CROs). The CROs resent the email 14 and 45 days after the first sending, totalling three attempts. In the same period, a wide-ranging dissemination strategy was pursued through social media. Responses to the form were monitored at all times and further dissemination strategies were implemented as needed15.

    The population of the multicentre study comprised 81,531 oral health professionals working in the three southern states in May 2020. With the study population size given by the number registered with the CROs, a non-probabilistic, convenience sample of 2,560 participants was obtained, representing a 3.1% response rate.

    Participants from Paraná comprised 1,127 oral health professionals, of whom 435 worked in private dental clinics and surgeries. The sample selected for this study comprised the 384 dental surgeons in Paraná who responded with regard to their work process in these establishments.

    The survey form addressed: sociodemographic characteristics; academic background and work; biosafety and COVID-19-related work process; access to information; and perceptions regarding anxiety, worry and emotional aspects of work. Response options for questions on biosafety and work process were organised on a five-point Likert frequency scale: (1) never, (2) almost never, (3) sometimes, (4) almost always and (5) always. There was also an ‘I don’t know’ option.

    In this study, the two outcome items selected as proxy for occupational stress related to perceived anxiety and emotional aspects of work during the pandemic: (1) I feel informed and secure enough to practice dentistry properly during the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) I feel anxious and worried about working properly in my dental practice during the COVID-19 pandemic. Both offered response options on a five-point Likert scale of agreement: (1) strongly disagree, (2) partly disagree, (3) neither agree nor disagree, (4) partly agree and (5) strongly agree. They also offered the ‘I don’t know’ response option.

    For purposes of analysis, in addition to the ordinal measure, responses to the two items were dichotomised and categorised as: a) ‘No’ - negative and neutral responses (completely disagree, partly disagree, neither agree nor disagree); and b) ‘Yes’ - positive responses (partly agree and totally agree). ‘I don’t know’ responses were considered missing (lost data). The outcomes of interest were the ‘No’ responses to feeling prepared and safe, and ‘Yes’ to feeling anxious and worried about working during the COVID-19 pandemic. These were considered proxy variables for stress symptoms.

    This study is based on self-perceived stress assessment16, and the choice of dependent and independent variables followed the explanatory theoretical model of occupational stress proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO)17 and adapted to dental surgeons working during the pandemic (Figure 1). The proxy variables for stress symptoms include psychological and emotional factors (anxiety and worry) and cognitive and behavioural factors (secure and knowledge). The independent variables identified from the answers were listed as individual factors and extra-organisational and organisational sources of stress connected with the work process, biosafety and access to personal protective equipment (PPE).

    The theoretical model described here rests on three explanatory pillars:

    1) Individual characteristics: intrinsically individual possible sources of stress represented by the variables: age (dichotomised at the median into less than 39 years old and 39 years old or more), gender (male/female), time since professional qualification (10 years or less/11 to 20 years/more than 20 years), existence of a risk condition for severe COVID-19 (No/Yes) and whether COVID-19 tested (No/Yes);

    2) Extra-organisational sources of stress indirectly related to the service as such and represented here by: withdrawal from practice in the pandemic (No/Yes) and access to information guidelines on dental care in health services (No/Yes); and

    3) Organisational sources of stress, that is, directly work-related possible causes of stress, such as: type of work relationship (dichotomised into self-employed and other relationships), having received workplace guidance on measures to be taken during the COVID-19 pandemic (No/Yes) and a set of questions about work process organisation (suspension of elective care, participation in decision-making, reduction of workload, investigation for symptoms of respiratory infection when scheduling appointments, specification of urgency following prior clinical protocols, COVID-19 guidance from dentist to patients, use of digital tele-guidance and tele-monitoring tools), which were categorised into ‘always/almost always’, ‘sometimes ‘ and ‘almost never/never’. The same went for dental clinic biosafety factors (cleaning and disinfection of the environment and suction hoses at each appointment, use of sterile handpieces at each appointment, four-handed dentistry, use of the rubber dam in high-speed procedures, avoidance of aerosol-generating procedures, doffing in correct sequence at each appointment) and access to, and use of, PPE (N95/PFF2 masks and waterproof aprons in sufficient quantity, use of face shield during patient care and N95/PFF2 mask reuse in accordance with safety criteria) (Figure 1).

    Lastly, the responses identified as proxy for occupational stress constituted the study outcome were the resultant of, on the one hand, sources of stress which can foster anxiety and concern and, on the other, information and conditions for safe clinical care during the pandemic (Figure 1).

    The data were organised in a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet and analysed using the SPSS for Windows (version 16.0) Package for the Social Sciences statistics programme. The sample’s sociodemographic, education, work and health characteristics were analysed using descriptive statistics. Absolute and percentage frequencies were measured for categorical variables, and medians (± interquartile intervals), for numeric variables.

    Associations between outcome variables were quantified using Spearman’s correlation test. Bivariate associations between outcomes (proxy for occupational stress) and explanatory variables (individual, extra-organisational and organisational factors) were measured using Pearson’s chi-square test, to a 5% level of statistical significance. Variables associated with each outcome with p-value ≤ 0.20 were eligible for multivariate analysis, which was performed by binary logistic regression. Results for the variables included in the multivariate explanatory model are displayed by crude and adjusted odds ratio with respective 95% confidence intervals. Years since completion of undergraduate course showed multicollinearity with age and was excluded from the analysis. Variables were included in the regression analysis by the enter method. Goodness of fit of the final model was assessed using the Hosmer and Lemershow test, with p ≥ 0.05 indicating fit.

    Results

    The sample characterisation (Table 1) revealed that participants were predominantly female (74.7%) and 39 years old or less (51.0%). Most reported no risk factors for the development of severe forms of COVID-19 (90.9%) and had not yet been tested for COVID-19 (71.6%). On the other hand, most participants declared having left off working in a dental clinic during the pandemic (84.4%), having had access to official COVID-19 prevention and control guidelines (84.4%) and having received workplace guidance on measures to be taken during the COVID-19 pandemic (77.5%). Table 1 also shows that, despite the high frequency of reports of feeling prepared and safe to work properly in dentistry during the COVID-19 pandemic (78.1%), most participants reported feeling anxious and worried (64.8%).

    The measure most often adopted to prevent and control the spread of COVID-19, as reflected in the response ‘always/almost always’, was to investigate for symptoms of respiratory infection when scheduling appointments (83.4%) and the measure least applied was to suspend elective procedures and restrict care to emergencies (29.7%) (Table 2).

    The biosafety measure most often taken in dental clinics, as given by ‘always/almost always’ responses, was for a trained professional, with appropriate PPE, to clean and disinfect the environment (80.5%), while the least applied was to avoid aerosol-generating procedures (26.6%), to use a rubber dam in high-speed treatments (32.0%), four-hand dentistry (40.1%) and to use sterile handpieces at each appointment (42.7%) (Table 2).

    The PPE most commonly available and used was the face shield (85.4%) and N95/PFF2 masks were available in sufficient quantity for most participants (76.6%) (Table 2).

    Table 3 shows the bivariate associations between explanatory factors of the theoretical model and the dichotomised outcome variables. As regards the individual factors, participants who felt prepared and confident were mostly male (p = 0.018), over 39 years old (p < 0.001), trained more than 20 years ago (p < 0.001) and had some risk factor for severe forms of COVID-19 (p = 0.044). Women (p = 0.015), younger participants (up to 39 years old) (p < 0.001) and more recent graduates (qualified up to 10 years previously) (p = 0.055) reported greater anxiety and concern (Table 3).

    In the block of extra-organisational work-related factors, professionals who stopped working during the pandemic were more anxious and concerned (p = 0.020), while those who had access to official COVID-19 prevention and control guidelines were more prepared and confident (p = 0.050) (Table 3).

    With regard to organisational factors, participants who declared they were more prepared and confident reported receiving workplace guidance on measures to be taken during the pandemic (p < 0.001), always or almost always suspending elective care (p = 0.035) and participating in decision-making (p < 0.001), as well as those who reported ‘always/almost always’ investigating for respiratory infection symptoms when scheduling appointments (p < 0.001), specifying emergencies on the basis of established protocols (p < 0.001) and using digital tele-guidance and tele-monitoring tools (p < 0.001). As regards workplace biosafety measures, participants who reported feeling better prepared and safer responded that ‘always/almost always’: a) the environment was cleaned and disinfected by a trained professional with appropriate PPE (p < 0.001); b) suction hoses were cleaned at each appointment (p < 0.001); c) sterile pens and handpieces were used at each appointment (p < 0.001); d) four-hand dentistry was performed (p = 0.002); e) aerosol-generating procedures were avoided (p = 0.005); f) doffing followed the recommended sequence (p < 0.001); g) enough N95/PFF2 masks were available (p = 0.018); and h) enough waterproof aprons were available (p = 0.046) (Table 3).

    The most anxious and concerned were women (p = 0.015), young people (up to 39 years old) (p < 0.001), participants who had completed their professional training within 10 years earlier (p = 0.055), who withdrew from clinical work during the pandemic (p = 0.020) and who “always/almost always” suspended elective care (p = 0.037) and used a face shield (p = 0.001). The most anxious and concerned declared that they “never/almost never” took part in decision making (p = 0.010). Also more anxious and worried were those who answered “sometimes” with regard to a trained professional’s cleaning and disinfecting the environment (p = 0.009) and four-hand dental care (p < 0.001) (Table 3).

    Table 4 shows the results of multivariate analysis for feeling individually prepared and safe with regard to, and anxious and concerned about, working in a clinic during the pandemic. The final model revealed that the preparedness and safety outcome was associated with individual and organisational biosafety-related factors. Participants were less likely to feel prepared and safe regarding clinical care because of individual factors (being female and younger) and organisational factors (not receiving workplace guidance on measures to be taken during the pandemic and “almost never/never” doffing in the recommended sequence). COVID-19-related factors, such as risk factors for severe forms of the disease and laboratory testing to detect COVID-19, were of borderline statistical significance and adjusted the explanatory model.

    In the multivariate model, feelings of anxiety and concern about working were found to be associated with only one individual factor - age - and with factors relating to work process organisation and biosafety in the clinic. Younger dentists, those who “almost never/never” participated in decision-making and who “sometimes” performed four-handed dental procedures were more likely to feel anxious and worried. Less likely to be anxious and worried were those who “almost never/never” suspended elective care and who “sometimes” used a face shield (Table 4).

    Discussion

    This study showed that most dentists reported feeling anxiety and concern about working during the COVID-19 pandemic, and that individual and organisational factors were associated with occupational stress among dentists in the private sector in the state of Paraná during the COVID-19 pandemic. Studies have shown that the pandemic affected mental health adversely in the population at large18, and especially among health personnel19 , including private-sector dentists10, who were more affected as compared with the emotional state of public-sector dentists10,11, possibly because of the unpredictability inherent to economic and work conditions in the former sector.

    Women are a majority among dental professionals in southern Brazil and the mostly-female sample was similar to those of most studies of dentists there, corroborating the feminisation of the profession20,21. Although studies have shown women to be more perceptive of mental health, the only outcomes with which gender was found to associate in this study were preparedness for, and safety at, work: more women reported feeling less prepared and safe. Although, in this study, gender was not retained in the multivariate analysis as a factor associated with anxiety, in the literature, women have been found at greater risk of anxiety during the COVID-19 pandemic19,22. That age showed greater impact than gender may be explained by the professional experience gained with age’s fostering feelings of being informed and safe in clinical practice and, consequently, resulting in less anxiety and concern at work and mitigating the influence of gender.

    In this study, most participants were in the younger age groups (median age, 39; 75% percentile, 47 years). Younger people tend to use social networks more and are more likely to respond to online surveys. With social isolation, however, the population as a whole began to make more use of these tools23, which may justify the similar participation by different age groups. Age was the only individual factor retained in the theoretical model in both outcomes, in which younger professionals felt less prepared and safe, and more anxious and concerned about working during the pandemic. In Turkey, recent dentistry graduates seemed to be the most affected during the pandemic24 and a study in Paraíba State in Brazil showed greater confidence in working during the pandemic among older dentists, which can be explained by their being longer in practice and more stably established in the profession25.

    As regards the organisational factors, participants who received workplace guidance on COVID-19 reported greater confidence and preparedness for work, highlighting the importance of continuing health education for practitioners. A study in São Paulo state showed that more than 80% of dentists received no specific training to control COVID-19 transmission in the healthcare environment, although several courses were available and widely publicised11.

    Participants who did not follow the recommended sequence for doffing PPE felt unprepared and more insecure in providing care during the pandemic. Given that doffing is one of the main routes for contamination of health personnel, this procedure is as important as donning3. Adequate access to, and proper use of, PPE have been associated with not only physical health protection, but greater job satisfaction and lesser emotional distress26.

    Organisational factors relating to adherence to COVID-19 protocols were associated with anxiety and concern about working. Lack of participation in decision-making was associated with a greater likelihood of participants’ being anxious and worried, suggesting that those employed in clinics, with fragile employment relationships, were adversely affected. This underlines the importance of team dialogue, as well as managers’ role in guiding targeted measures.

    Professionals who understood the importance of the adjustments were more affected emotionally, as they were more aware of the risk of infection and possibly more concerned about the consequences of contamination, as evidenced in the association between use of face shield and anxiety and concern. Lax adherence to protective measures, reflected in the “sometimes” responses with regard to four-hand care, showed that uncertainty regarding the workplace support structure can generate anxiety and concern among health personnel. Private sector care teams do not always include oral health assistants and technicians, although this can optimise the work, possibly because they represent an additional financial burden for the clinics. Nonetheless, four-hand dentistry is highly recommended and stressed during pandemics because it helps reduce the generation of aerosols, speeds up care and, consequently, reduces the risk of contamination27.

    On the other hand, participants who did not suspend elective care were less anxious and worried. With time, they had possibly grown used to the inappropriate conditions or this may even suggest carelessness and denial of the severity of the pandemic, both of which are associated with a lesser likelihood of occupational stress. A study in Poland showed that dentists who suspended their clinical work reported greater anxiety than those who continued their practice without interruption22. In general, however, dentists seem to have a good command of knowledge of COVID-19 and the adjustments necessary in services to minimise the risk of contamination28.

    Patient flow, in both urgent and elective care29, has been seen to decrease in private dental services worldwide, entailing financial losses for practitioners. Also, the impact of COVID-19 on dentists’ financial situation is determined by factors beyond those inherent to suspending care during a critical period of the pandemic, because the economic situation of patients who attend private dental clinics is intrinsically bound up with the country’s economic situation. Accordingly, the current economic crisis in Brazil, which involves reduced purchasing power, high rates of unemployment and food insecurity, has heightened the impacts of the pandemic and aggravated this problem30.

    The findings of this study, in which participants under most occupational stress were younger, women and more recent graduates, demonstrate the existence of precarious work relations in the private dental sector. In practice, it is increasingly common for employment situations not to assure favourable conditions of care and adequate PPE, but subject dental workers’ wage gains to their quantitative performance of procedures, which diminished or were abruptly stopped during the pandemic period. This thus resulted in substantial financial losses and, consequently, affected these workers’ emotional health. Also, informal employment lacking guarantees has devalued and impaired working conditions. That dental practice in the supplementary health market is precarious is recognised in the literature31, and in Brazil, it has to be acknowledged that the labour market is over-supplied with dental surgeons, as a result of the excessive number of schools of dentistry across the country, plus a lack of market regulation and State control31.

    The findings of this study may thus be reflecting the effects of problems existing in the dental sector labour market prior to the pandemic, especially in southern Brazil, where this study took place and where, after the southeast, most of Brazil’s dentists are concentrated32. The findings, which are grounded in the concepts of the theoretical models applied33,34, help to explain, in part, socioeconomic points of view on occupational stress among dentists, which was aggravated during COVID-19.

    Having been tested for COVID-19, although not associated at the 5% level, was an important variable in fitting the final explanatory model. This finding may be connected with uncertainty about possible infection by the disease, which would affect dentists emotionally, especially at a time when there were no proven effective drugs nor vaccines available for the disease. The sample comprised liberal professionals from the private sector, most of whom had only one job and were thus not only concerned over their own health with regard to this newly-arrived installed infectious disease, but were suffering direct impact on their financial situation from the necessary period of isolation, quarantine and resulting absence from work, which left them apprehensive and worried about the future of the profession35,36.

    Vaccination has been highly effective in controlling COVID-1937 and may impact the responses of participants who answered the questionnaire early in the pandemic. Accordingly, the multicentre research team plans to conduct a further wave of data collection. Although the instrument used to measure occupational stress was a proxy for occupational stress and the validation of the research instrument has yet to be published, the data obtained here are consistent with findings in the literature on the subject19,24. Note that the data were collected between August 10 and October 7, 2020 and, given the spread of the pandemic into new phases, accentuated by the emergence of new variants of the virus, the findings should be interpreted with caution, as they may not be representative of the whole pandemic period. One limitation of this study is the bias inherent to participation in an online questionnaire by a convenience sample. However, sample calculation found that the study sample was of sufficient sise to represent the state of Paraná.

    The findings of this study underline the need to build strategies to minimise the emotional impacts suffered by private sector dentists during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is the job of Brazil’s federal and regional boards of dentistry to enable and encourage dental caregivers to qualify through permanent health education to afford them effective preparation and safety for working in clinical practice. It is the function of the regulatory bodies to supervise and seek to improve labour relations and working conditions in the private dental sector, so as to guarantee dentists’ rights, given that these conditions are intrinsically related to the occupational stress suffered by workers, which may potentially affect their mental health.

    Collaborations

    EC Pacheco and LS Avais: study design, data collection and interpretation, drafting of the article. RG Ditterich, MF Silva-Junior e MH Baldani: study design, data collection and interpretation, final review of the article.

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    Introduction

    Latin America has 8.4% of the world’s population but has had 24% of COVID-19 infections and 28% of deaths for that cause until August 2022. Other more populated regions had proportionally fewer infections and deaths: Asia, with 59.5% of the world’s population, had 27.9% of infections and 22.6% of deaths; Europe, with 9.6% of the population, had 36.8% infections and 29.3% of deaths; North America, with 4.7% of the population had 16.2% infections and 16.7% of deaths.

    The first case confirmed in Latin America was registered in Brazil on February 26, 2020, and the first deceased in Argentina on March 7. Since then, until August 2022, the region has paid the cost of 1.711 million lives due to the pandemic1. Obviously, the cost has been different throughout Latin American countries. Table 1 shows that Peru stands out in terms of deaths by COVID-19 per million inhabitants, with a rate of 6,366, followed by Brazil and Chile, above 3,000 deaths. A second group comprises Paraguay, Argentina, Colombia, Mexico, Uruguay, and Ecuador, with mortality rates between 2,012 and 2,877. A third group with minor rates includes Bolivia, Costa Rica, and Cuba, below 1,800 killed per million. Whatever the variation between countries, the regional mean is high (2,659), above that of the OECD (2,137) and other world regions.

    Why this disproportion in Latin America? What did we do wrong? Do we not have health management capabilities in the face of epidemics and pandemics? Is it centrally a problem of our health systems? Was another result possible with our types of societies?

    Now, looking at the future, will we have learned the lesson? What are the big lessons? The central discourse that stems from the North about converting our health systems to resiliency, in adapting what we have before eventual new pandemics, must it be the axis of our solutions for them? Will we not need to enter a new battle for health ideas in the Post COVID-19 era, which allows another perspective of what lies ahead?

    Methods

    The present paper reviews and discusses the literature that attempts to answer these questions, under the hypothesis that the use of the window of opportunity that means the socio-health crisis experienced depends on evaluating how much these crises are predictable and confrontable, which requires evidence and adequate approaches to assess them. The central narrative on the type of post-pandemic normality throughout Latin America is at stake, which includes its health systems.

    The study is based on a review of the non-medical, clinical, or pharmacological scientific literature on the pandemic. General search descriptors such as <pandemic COVID-19>, <SARS-CoV-2>, <coronavirus> were adopted and returned 437,000 results in Google Scholar, 150,804 in PubMed, and 28,428 in Science Direct from 2020 to August 2022. The analysis of a sample of the 500 most cited scientific articles on Google Scholar revealed that most of the global production on the pandemic (84%) is biomedical. The remaining 16% seeks a global interpretation of what happened and forward public policies. The critical review of these 80 scientific articles, editorials, and comments in indexed journals in Scopus or Web of Science has been the base material for the present reflection on the state of the matter.

    Results

    Literature on the pandemic and spectrum of the predictable and unpredictable

    There has been much scientific production about COVID-19 since the first cases in Wuhan, most from virology, molecular biology, genetic engineering, clinical medicine, and veterinary medicine. However, there have also been more panoramic readings of the pandemic from epidemiology, public health, social sciences, and humanities, and they can be classified into a continuum between two extremes: from the Black Swan theory or Taleb’s Impact of the Highly Improbable2 to environmental-public health theories, proposing a Single Health or articulation between human medicine, veterinary medicine, and ecology3,4. These general writings about the pandemic could be classified into six theses of what happened: a) the unpredictability of pandemics; b) the denial of the pandemic; c) the pandemic as a failure in predictability systems; d) the possible prevention of catastrophic events with interventions focused on critical variables; e) the structural postponement of care from predictions by underdeveloped countries; and f) the environmentalist-health-related, forecasting a critical phase for the planet and humanity.

    It is evident that there are no precise borders between these approaches to the pandemic, and there are many mixtures. However, the location in some of these postures has apparent implications on what is proposed forward.

    Unpredictability or the fortuitous case

    The thesis of unpredictability is that of chance in history, understood as a succession of black swans or high-impact and unpredictable rare events. It is true that we are returning from the deterministic rationalist understandings that dominated most of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Since Khaneman5, Thaler et al.6 and Akerlof et al.7, behaviorism has been giving an account of the last remnants of the Homo Economicus, raised as predictable according to the calculation of their interests. However, this new focus between the rational and the intuitive, between the structured and semi-structured or unstructured, does not imply indeterminacy.

    The studies self-limited to the “zero cases” in the Huanan market are approaching the unpredictability or random contagion thesis under the assumption of infectious events without underlying determinants. The exaltation by some followers of a traditional tropicalism these last two years has attempted to focus the issue on the details of the first cases on the southwest side of the Huanan market and, thus, lost sight of the set8,9. According to this line of thought, a hypothetically fortuitous act where a virus that coexisted thousands of years with bats was transmitted to humans. However, this transmission would have occurred anywhere else on the planet had it not been in Wuhan because the multiplication of zoonoses is a symptom of our time. The issue is “why”.

    The denial of the pandemic

    It was relatively easy to shift from the SARS-CoV-2 thesis as a rare and unpredictable event to the denial of its actual existence, or its severity, or even the thesis of facilitating the “flock immunity”10,11.

    Thus, three years of public intervention denialism were inaugurated under the alleged claim of defending individuals. Initially, conservative governments allowed the unrestricted spread of the virus, postponing social distancing or immobilization measures12. This rhetoric raised a moral claim of freedom without responsibility13. Once again, we stood before the dilemma of collective action or tragedy of the commons in societies with the primacy of individual interests. There is no public good nor public/collective health.

    Either with the thesis that COVID-19 was the result of some conspiracy, that the scientific community was wrong, that the coronavirus did not have the severity it was assigned, or that masks or quarantines or vaccines were unnecessary, countries like The United States, England, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, were for some time defenseless against the pandemic14-16. As Paviotti17 says, another battle was established in this context of fake news, fears, speculations, and misinformation: the political struggle for narrative control.

    The failure of the predictability systems

    Most of the literature has focused on pragmatically examining failures in the early detection of the pandemic. From this viewpoint of the pandemic, it is a management failure of many governments, of which there have certainly been many before. And they have cost many lives lost: in a crisis, all delay, omission, and erroneous decision translates into massive avoidable morbimortality.

    The WHO emergency committee’s 71-day delay in declaring the pandemic has remained in the memory of global public health and health authorities as one of the things that cannot be repeated. International health regulations that define the steps to report pandemics and have control measures have begun to be rediscussed. There has been a feeling that a new “treatise on pandemics”18 is necessary, whose draft has been announced for 2024, which is too far.

    The COVID-19 pandemic exposed decades of State weakening and its inability to manage risks given the practical non-existence of anticipation and planning. The incorporation of Latin America into the global era of pandemics was not noticed, and this is not the first pandemic. Regarding the coronavirus, global society remembered the pandemics of the 20th and 21st centuries, although only a few lessons were learned from the previous ones.

    Precursors always foretell significant historical events without anyone paying attention to them. Laurie Garrett’s early warnings still ring in our ears: While the human race battles itself, fighting over ever more crowded turf and scarcer resources, the advantage moves to the microbes’ court. They are our predators, and they will be victorious if we, Homo sapiens, do not learn how to live in a rational global village that affords the microbes few opportunities. It is either that or we brace ourselves for the coming plague 19.

    Osterholm20 warned that time was running out to prepare for a pandemic. Webster21 predicted two years earlier that it was only a matter of time before we witnessed another deadly and disturbing pandemic. Almost all those responsible for studying global disasters and emergencies knew and announced that a pandemic was in the offing22. The first were the ecologists, and today it is clear their precursor message was correct. For most of the specialized literature, the zoonosis from which SARS-CoV-2 derives is a reaction to an exacerbated cornering of the planet23.

    As far as Latin America is concerned, the delay in entirely acting was two months since the first COVID-19 cases were reported at the end of February, especially in March 2020, when the region woke up. All of the above was a rhythm of waiting and a very weak preparedness, with some exceptions. However, between the first and second half of March, when the infections and deaths had a domino-like effect, all the countries closed their borders and took emergency measures and mandatory immobilization or quarantines. Argentina entered a state of emergency or exception on March 11, Colombia and Bolivia on March 12, Peru on March 15, Costa Rica on March 16, Brazil on March 20, and Mexico on March 3024. The countries’ borders were closed, and the Latin American governments and health systems took a sharp turn in that fortnight. Moreover, many previous warning signs of those two months are now known to have been minimized or ignored. Many unreported or not studied cases presented in February have been discovered recently.

    There is a vast written production on the weakness of the ministries’ and governments’ early warning systems, as we will see25. Indeed, there has been neglect. However, is it only that of those two months and nothing more?

    The problem with this type of literature is that it addresses health emergencies as the periodic hiccups of normal society. It is not necessary to correct society but hiccups. It does not ask why the recurrence of these same emergencies and whether the surveillance systems are there to support the resolution of the issues or instead to relieve and postpone them for the next occasion. That is why they act proactively for emergencies that they consider naturally repeatable. The problem is, given the current global context and the poor conditions of most Latin American societies and health systems, are we still living in a continuous health emergency that has become our normality?

    The possibility of preventing catastrophic events with specific interventions

    Another type of literature seeks to generate evidence to prevent future eventualities by reinforcing health systems and societal environments. To this end, studies on the combinations of variables, indicators, and explanatory categories of the two great pandemic results, infections, and COVID-19 deaths, have multiplied. Among them are the studies by Acosta26, García, Alarcón et al.27, Schwalb et al.28, and Cid et al.29. The value of this latest literature is that, besides capturing critical variables backward, it allows prioritizing forward where to emphasize interventions so that what happened is not repeated. The question is whether a range of specific interventions guarantees the non-repetition of systemic events.

    The structural postponement of forecasting attention by developing countries

    This thesis transcends the previous ones as far as the decision-makers no longer intend to attend to the forecasts when there are any. These are authorities and managers of unprotected societies with deficient health systems, that is, most Latin American countries.

    People know what is coming, but they need to act accordingly. Thus, health exclusion situations are rhetorically addressed, and the intentional and revocable non-application of the law is normal. Holland’s30 concept of forbearance explains this “normally tolerated default”. In Latin America, forbearance is related to omission as a policy. According to McConnell et al.31, the study of public policies has been characterized by a bias toward the study of State activity. However, it has yet to focus on analyzing its inactivity. In many southern countries, the State is aware of the gaps that do not allow it to guarantee the rights of its population. It, therefore, allows a political culture of “consensual non-compliance”. For this reason, the resilience of health systems will be insufficient for the next crisis.

    In Latin America, the pandemic defeated not only the health systems but also the historical model of Iberian American societies without universal social protection regimens32,33. Health systems in the region need to be organized practically under the principle of Health for All, but rather Health for Some34. There is a permanent deficit of supply accessible to the entire population, which expresses a level of exclusion allowed and is part of the reproduction mechanism of the old normality. This undercoverage is expressed in the over-exhaustion of the working or informal population and, therefore, in a morbimortality and loss of years of healthy life avoidable since before the pandemic.

    These health systems were asked during the pandemic to solve the problem that States and governments had been unable or wanted to solve for decades. Most countries had substandard societies and health systems. Given that the Latin American countries have different reproduction models, they are organized around points of balance or imbalance, with variable levels of centripetal and centrifugal forces and mean exhaustion or over-exhaustion, thus with protected, semi-protected, and unprotected countries with high, medium, and low resilience, more or less lethal and contagious countries, since before the pandemic.

    All of this was expressed in the pandemic. The “society-health system binomial” largely determined the infection volume and excess mortality. We can observe from the figures in Table 2 that countries with higher levels of poverty, with high informality levels, with high percentages of their wealth concentrated in their upper quintiles, without safe quality water, among other societal variables, were predestined to failure, and vice versa.

    As of March 2020, governments charged their health systems with saving their societies. However, as seen in Table 3, most of these arrived at the pandemic with few resources, with low public spending and high out-of-pocket spending. The latter was, on average, 32% of total health spending in 2019, while it was 21% in the OECD. Public spending per capita exceeded 700 dollars per annum only in Costa Rica, Panama, Cuba, and Uruguay, and many countries ranged from 100 and 300 dollars per annum.

    In most cases, public health spending against GDP ranged from 3% to 6%. The doctors, nurses, and beds rates did not exceed WHO standards either. It is unsurprising that the region, with 8.4% of the world population, has produced 15.3% of global excess mortality. Furthermore, in 2020, the pandemic increased the number of poor to 204 million and of extreme poor to 81 million and elevated the GINI Index by 0.7 as a regional mean from 2019 to 202035. It was a vicious circle: inequality aggravated the pandemic, and this, in turn, generated even greater inequality.

    Governments were so aware of the supply deficit that, in March 2020, they hurriedly tried to cover the resource gap to reinforce their services, although it was too late. There was a massive shift in trying to do in months what had been neglected for decades.

    Everything was needed in everyone. They were all resilient since before the pandemic because part of their job was to manage scarcity to the extent possible. Now, thinkers from the North, from countries with welfare states or better health systems, are asking Latin American health systems for even more resilience36,37.

    The health management of the pandemic was an exceptional moment in the life of health systems, with some of the following characteristics:

    The State, long criticized, came to the fore and showed that it had to lead the response to the pandemic.

    It woke up from the lethargy of the New Public Management, its fragmented State with the division of functions, the long blockade of coordination, and its cultivation of the private as naturally the best.

    The old public equipment was pushed to the maximum and gave rise to a period of great productivity.

    The health workforce grew, with the massive integration of new human resources, including students in their final years.

    Despite damaged primary care levels in most cases, the base staff took over the early screening and vaccinations, and the intra-muralism and attention to demand were broken for a period.

    In countries with certain levels of digitization, teleworking, and hybrid, face-to-face and virtual work have expanded; where there was none, the national learning of the digital began at a forced march. The pandemic enormously expanded digitization and the width of the Internet (Table 3).

    The situation forced the repair of chronically weak or broken supply chains, with periods of shortages of supplies and medicines, overcoming the efficient just-in-time logic to shift to a supply with higher margins.

    The services assumed a policy of massive over-exploitation of face-to-face work. However, in many cases, the health personnel also plunged into a massive voluntary self-exploitation, resulting in burnout and mental health problems.

    Although some countries legally extended the working hours of health personnel, most health professionals and workers understood that it was an emergency and did what they had to do.

    It was a particular stage of relative lack of protection of human resources in health to protect their societies in an emergency.

    Domestic health care and palliative society reappeared with more force, still under the female role and the family format as a central resilience unit.

    It was an act of massive generosity that millions of health professionals and workers in Latin America shouldered the social and health debt generated and engaged in the line of duty to the front line of battle, giving their share of sacrifices to offset the “structural or historical neglect”. The WHO estimated that 80,000 to 180,000 workers had died from COVID-19 from January 2020 to May 2021, converging on an average figure of 115,000 deaths38; a good part of them consisted of Latin Americans.

    The environmentalist-health prediction

    Fortunately, these have not been the only global messages that have emerged in this momentum of creating the post-pandemic future. Much more promise for Latin America and humanity contains the possibility of an environmentalist-health perspective of what happened. Animals and humans share nearly 300 diseases, and 60% of known human infectious diseases are of (domestic or wild) animal origin39. That is why today, the conviction making its way into world public health is that, from now on, human health, animal health, and ecosystems will have to be studied together under the new concept of “One Health”. Steele40 and Schwabe41 previously said this. Since then, global warming has further modified the epidemiology of zoonotic diseases and altered the interactions between hosts, vectors, and pathogens42. Human health and veterinary medicine are already and will be closely linked.

    However, the environmentalist-health approach transcends zoonoses due to the multidimensional planetary crisis we are experiencing. It places the criticism of the production and society model in the center based on the intensive use of resources, consumerism, and the privilege of efficiency as a life metric. Many of the previous constructions in the health field, such as health promotion, social determinants, prevention, primary care, care theories, and healthy lifestyles, partially match ecologic theories. However, health systems health can only overcome their assigned role of repairing damage, which is increasingly impossible to fulfill in these new times if they merge their heritage into this broader framework of life in harmony between humanity and the planet43. Health philosophies have yet to enter the debate in this preliminary link between ecologism and public or collective health, with few exceptions44.

    We must look at the post-pandemic not as a simple restoration of the previous dilemmas between neoliberalism and collective health because it has further opened up the future health agenda: a) The colossal health crisis was also a great moment for a revival of nature’s free expression in all the cities of the world in quarantine, almost as a preview of what the planet would be like without all the “noise” of our presence: “The fauna recolonizes the city in the face of confinement by the coronavirus”, exclaimed the world press in March 202045. b) It was also a great occasion for demonstrations of new social interaction, forced by the need for survival but equally disinterested. And c) a stage of global learning of a neo-hygienist culture, forced by contagion but projectable now as a post-pandemic proposal in terms of public policies for territorial planning, pro-green urban zoning, ventilated homes, decent transportation, expanded spaces for leisure time and other daily sociability46.

    Discussion

    The critical review of the literature that we have conducted on the different perspectives on the pandemic has prospective implications for the health systems of the future. The theses a) of the black swan and b) denialist, are the most harmful to health; the theses c) on health surveillance systems’ failure and d) on focused interventions, seem to enclose, with their limits, part of the solutions; but the theses e) on the structural postponement to meet announced predictions, and f) on the environmentalist-health forecast of the onset of a critical phase for the planet, seem to enclose the problem’s core and its solutions.

    In pre-pandemic times, the aggressive economic model had repositioned health systems as primarily curative, albeit with different levels of preventive-promotional work depending on the country. However, when public health spending is minimal, it even stops paying for the redress of the whole and skims off the strip that is useful to it, the scenario in which we were in. This was the natural course of things, the actual public health policy in many countries, but not all. In contrast, formal public policy was filled with rhetoric based on principles, while the multiplication of overlapping innovations disorganized the practice of Latin American systems and services. Thus, confused hybrid systems, infinite reforms, and superficial modernizations were established.

    The new problem is that climate change has been added to the balance, against it, and in this context of economies that produce disasters and pandemics, the effective counterweight of the old restorative health systems may be even less. This implies that this stage must be completed and return to clear organization and financing models towards universalism. In this context, the preparation for the next pandemic cannot be only a problem of resilience.

    Finally, Latin America had many mistakes, but in the end, it was mostly positioned in the global concert of approaches to ethics and social justice that were put into play in the face of the pandemic. To defend itself against the pandemic, it had to reject the anarcho-liberal solution of extreme individualism, which was no longer that of the classical liberals, friends of checks and balances, but that of Ayn Rand, who condemns altruism as irrational and encourages the individual’s morality as the absolute value.

    We can imagine the neo-Malthusian implications of this approach amid the pandemic. Unfortunately, Latin America had not built the European solution of a great provider and guarantor of health, like the welfare regimens founded decades ago by Marshall, Titmuss, and Beveridge, despite being the path closest to our universalism in health. For this reason, during the crisis, the governments assumed the humanitarian and social defense of the populations, relying pragmatically on the Benthamian crisis management solution and ex-post solutions, the only possible ones already during the struggle, although they have less ceiling for the systemic crises to come. This, while other peoples appealed centrally to Hobbes and Leviathan, such as Asian countries.

    Above all, however, the global mobilization to get out of the pandemic was built on the Kantian foundation of the unrestricted defense of human dignity regardless of age or ethnic, gender, or social origin, a principle that has been the organizer of the global response to the pandemic. It was the first time a global action of this size occurred.

    Latin America, the region that suffered and struggled the most because it did not have as many previous experiences as Asia or other regions, has to organize its message to contemporary global public health, which must stem from an environmentalist-health, multicultural, feminist, and decolonizing perspective, because the single-voice world has come to an end, and that is the importance of the moment for the region.

    p. 3002

    Where it reads:

    Article submitted 30/06/2022

    Approved 01/06/2023

    Final version submitted 26/06/2023

    Reads up:

    Article submitted 01/09/2022

    Approved 01/06/2023

    Final version submitted 28/06/2023

Fechas de Publicación

  • Publicación en esta colección
    23 Oct 2023
  • Fecha del número
    Oct 2023

Histórico

  • Recibido
    01 Set 2022
  • Acepto
    01 Jun 2023
  • Publicado
    28 Jun 2023
ABRASCO - Associação Brasileira de Saúde Coletiva Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: revscol@fiocruz.br