MELO, W. F.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/6778102000262061; MELO, Willivane Ferreira de.
Résumé:
The few studies about the HIV/(AIDS) theme and the quilombola communities point out to a
vulnerability to the virus infection, mainly at the programmatic level, i.e., policies and public
services. The aim of this paper is to identify the conditions of access and use of the public
services for HIV (AIDS) of the quilombola communities in the municipality of Santarém,
State of Pará, identifying its prevention and care actions as for this aggravation, under the
quilombolas perspective. It is a qualitative type of study performed with 04 communities
(Tiningú, Murumurutuba, Saracura and Pérola do Maicá), through 20 semi-structured
interviews (04 leaderships, 03 health agents, 13 residents), informal talks and participative
observation. The results have shown that the persons interviewed had some information about
HIV/(AIDS) and, in general, the information sources from superior education institutions
(SEI) through the performance of research and extension projects; the most referred
transmission via of the virus was sexual; the most mentioned piece of information about
prevention actions was the use of male condoms, although sexual abstinence and having only
one sexual partner were considered prevention methods; the prevention actions of the Public
Health Service are focused on pregnant women through the pre-birth program (secondary
prevention), with difficulties to the access to the budget to wider actions for education and
health; there are difficulties to the access to the Public Health Service, specially at the dale
area. This paper has shown a context of programmatic vulnerability with low access to the
Sistema Único de Saúde (Unified Health System) what was considered a form of institutional
racism. The relationships established amongst the local quilombola movement and the SEI
have contributed to allow visibility to the discussion about health in such communities. There
is a necessity for the local public health to intensify education for health, including prevention
actions, where racial and cultural diversity is one of the elements to be considered for their
planning, aiming to guarantee the construction of health public policies that do respect these
territories, i.e., so that they are included into their legitimate right to citizenship.