Preceptoria em Medicina de Família e Comunidade: desafios e realizações em uma Atenção Primária à Saúde em construção
DOI: 10.1590/1413-81232017223.332372016
737
Preceptorship in Family and Community Medicine:
challenges and achievements in a Primary Health Care in progress
ARTICLE
Mellina Marques Vieira Izecksohn 1
Jorge Esteves Teixeira Junior 2
Bruno Pereira Stelet 2
Adelson Guaraci Jantsch 3
Centro de Saúde Escola
Germano Sinval Faria,
Escola Nacional de Saúde
Pública, Fiocruz. R.
Leopoldo Bulhões 1480,
Manguinhos. 21041-210
Rio de Janeiro RJ Brasil.
2
Faculdade de Medicina,
Universidade Federal do Rio
de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro
RJ Brasil.
3
Programa de Residência
Médica, Secretaria
Municipal de Saúde do Rio
de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro
RJ Brasil.
1
Abstract Strengthening Primary Health Care
(PHC) relies directly on training medical specialists in primary care. This text aims to report
the Family Medicine training experiences in Rio
de Janeiro between 2008 and 2016. It brings to
reflection the development of preceptors in medical specialization through an experience report
on three Family Medicine medical residency programs, namely, the Municipal Health Secretariat
program, the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
program and the National School of Public Health
program. The PHC reform in Rio de Janeiro created a demand for medical specialists working
in networks, leading to the expansion of already
established medical residency programs and the
establishment of a new program sponsored by
the Municipal Health Secretariat, providing new
teaching positions in several health facilities within the municipal network. These three residency
programs progressed through different paths to
provide training to their preceptors, offering permanent courses and local actions seeking higher
professional qualification and better balance between care and education responsibilities. Permanent investments to strengthen medical residency
programs and preceptors training are essential to
consolidate the PHC reform nationwide.
Key words Family and community medicine,
Primary Health Care, Medical internship and
residency, Preceptorship
Izecksohn MMVet al.
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Introduction
The recognition that Primary Health Care (PHC)
is an effective organizing element of health systems is evident and abundant in the scientific
literature1,2. When health care’s gateway consists
of a robust and structured PHC ensuring access,
comprehensive and longitudinal care and coordinating care to patients within the system, patients feel more satisfied and there are a number
of favorable impacts on the health of the population1. Its impacts at the community level can be
observed in greater adherence to preventive measures, lower maternal and infant mortality, lower low birth weight3, greater life expectancy and
lower overall mortality in the adult population4.
At the hospital level, structured PHC may contribute to fewer PHC-sensitive hospitalizations
and reduced use of emergency services5,6.
Locations with PHC based on general practitioners have better health outcomes compared
to other that rely primarily on non-general practitioners in their organization7. However, one
of the major challenges to the qualification and
consolidation of PHC worldwide is related to the
training of specialized professionals for this level
of health care8.
Despite the relevance of scientific production and the recognition of its importance and
competence in developed countries, the medical
specialty aimed at primary health care in Brazil –
Family and Community Medicine (FCM) – still
does not have the same importance in the health
system. This hardship is not unique to Brazil and
is linked to incipient health systems common to
developing countries, where most health care is
performed in a hospital setting, with PHC playing
a minor and selective role, where oral rehydration
therapy, contraception and vaccination are the
core services offered9. The obstacles preventing
the Family and Community Doctor (FCD) from
playing a key role in PHC in these countries were
analyzed by the Besrour Foundation in 2015,
and the three main ones were: 1. FCDs in different countries play several roles in their practice settings, mostly solving problems that could
be solved by a multidisciplinary organization of
the work process; 2. Due to the lack of systems’
organization, there is no regulation determining
which medical specialty is responsible for the first
contact with patients. Thus, several medical specialties end up competing within the medical corporation itself, making it difficult to coordinate
care and making the choice of professionals for
a specialty be more market logic-oriented rather
than population needs-oriented; 3. In an environment with high workloads and poorly organized
service flows, longitudinality and its benefits do
not seem to be easy to achieve10.
PHC strengthening relies directly on the
training of primary care physicians to meet the
health needs of the population. This reinforces
the idea that, in order to be effective in PHC, the
professional must be educated and trained to do
so. Health students need to have experience in
PHC during training as a way of understanding
that health care is the result of a structured system and depends much more on the coordination of the different levels of care than on isolated
clinical behaviors11.
The training of medical specialists is usually carried out by immersion in the daily life of
specific services, whose teaching methodology
is centered on the coexistence and observation
of the practice of a more experienced and specialized supervising physician12. While practical
activities structure the learning process, it is expected that an intrinsic relation between practice
and theory will occur13.
The complexity of training in PHC settings
requires the specific skills of professionals who
guide these students in practice, called preceptors. In addition to the clinical skills to diagnose
and treat the most common conditions of the
health-disease process affecting the population,
the FCD needs to act strategically in disease prevention and health promotion actions, always
taking into account the sociocultural complexity
that permeates the lives of individuals, families
and communities. If there is already a challenge
to train specialist medical professionals with this
view, more complicated is the training of preceptors in this setting. Within a context of PHC under construction, it becomes much more difficult
to train specialist physicians imbued with teaching responsibilities and building bridges between
theory and practice.
This article aims to report the experiences of
FCM training in the city of Rio de Janeiro from
2008 to 2016, with the purpose of reflecting on
the development of preceptorship in the scope of
medical specialization.
The PHC Reform in Rio de Janeiro
and the expansion of Family
and Community Medicine Medical
Residency Programs
PHC expansion in Rio de Janeiro resulted in
an accelerated increase of Family Health Teams
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In this setting of expanding PHC, it was not
possible to co (...truncated)