SILVA, A. R. P.; SILVA, Ana Rita Pereira da.
Résumé:
Since the creation of the Unified Health System in the late 1980s, aiming to ensure
that universality and equality in health care, numerous programs were created. In this
sense, the present work aims to analyze, within the scope of public health policies,
how, in the context of the beginning of the 21st century, the creation of the Expanded
Nucleus for Family Health took place in the small country town of Marizópolis, in the
State of Paraíba. The main objective of the study was to understand the role of the
NASFAB multiprofessional team in that municipality from the reality existing in the
Basic Health Unit II. The research also analyzed the interaction of the Nucleus' team
of professionals, notably in relation to matrix support. Nevertheless, it was also
sought to know the working conditions and the actions to be taken by such
professionals. To support these reflections, bibliographic research was carried out,
which made it possible to understand the historical process of the emergence and
development of social health policies in Brazil, the which culminated with the creation
of SUS in the 1980s. A study was also carried out on the emergence of NASFAB in
Brazil, in order to reflect on the importance of this program as a space for articulation
between the various teams of professionals working in Basic Care, that together
strengthen and concretize the National Health Policy. The work approach is
qualitative. In this sense, to achieve the proposed objectives, observational and
exploratory research was carried out, which enabled both the production of empirical
knowledge about the object of study and the collection of data that were not found in
other documentary sources. In this sense, note the importance that documentary
research had in this study, allowing to analyze the normative trajectory of health
practices and policies in Brazil. The theoreticalmethodological approach comes
close to Marx's criticaldialectical method. Finally, based on the compulsory data, it is
concluded that the NASFAB's performance in the Basic Health Unit II is satisfactory,
despite the limits imposed by the lack of resources to finance the program, as there
are flaws in the management of the Center in relation to UBS, as well, as there are
difficulties in dialogues between the teams.