نبذة مختصرة : The Mais Médicos Program involved restructuring strategies for health units, changes in the curriculum of medical schools, expansion of undergraduate and residency vacancies, in addition to the emergency supply of doctors. The Primary Care Access and Quality Improvement Program was one of the largest primary care assessment programs in Brazil, assessing the quality of services and seeking to expand access and improve this quality. Since the Mais Médicos Program was related to an improvement in the quality of care in Primary Care by different studies, it would be reasonable to think that this would have an effect on the evaluation of the Program for Improving Access and Quality in Primary Care. In the same sense, the objective of this work is to evaluate the effects of the Mais Médicos Program on the certification scores and indicators of the Program for Improving Access and Quality of Primary Care of teams in the state of Paraíba. It is a study with a quantitative approach, mixed ecological type, retrospective, longitudinal, evaluating the relationship between the two programs. Initially, studies that could demonstrate some effect of the Mais Médicos Program on the indicators evaluated by the Program for Improving Access and Quality of Primary Care were evaluated. A survey was carried out in the Scielo, Pubmed and BVS / Bireme databases, looking for articles whose results were somehow related to the dimensions and subdimensions evaluated in this program. The evolution of grades between the 1st and 3rd cycles of this program was evaluated through a paired t-test and a t-test for independent samples was also performed in order to compare the difference in grade averages between the group that had at least 30 months of the Mais Médicos Program and the group that had the program for a period of less than 30 months. The relationship between the length of time as a doctor in the Mais Médicos Program and the certification scores of the family health teams was also evaluated, as well as the relationship between this ...
No Comments.