masterThesis
"Eu sou uma pessoa e não uma doença": a gestão autônoma de medicação na estratégia saúde da família de um município do interior do Rio Grande do Norte
Fecha
2019-10-18Registro en:
COSTA, Antônio Henrique Braga da. "Eu sou uma pessoa e não uma doença": a gestão autônoma de medicação na estratégia saúde da família de um município do interior do Rio Grande do Norte. 2019. 126f. Dissertação (Mestrado Profissional em Saúde da Família) - Centro de Ciências da Saúde, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2019.
Autor
Costa, Antônio Henrique Braga da
Resumen
The Brazilian psychiatric reform movement proposes the production of new practices
and contexts of interventions \ mental health care based on freedom care and that
seek to establish themselves against the hegemonic medicalizing logic, which has
produced an epidemic of diagnoses of mental disorders, fruit of the phenomenon of
medicalization of life. One of the expressions of this phenomenon is the high
prescription rates of psychotropic drugs and the low critical use of these drugs in
health services. Therefore, it is urgent in the context of the articulation of
psychosocial care with primary health care in Psychosocial Care Networks, to
propose elements aligned with non-medicalizing perspectives and seeking an
intervention model that favors integral and territorialized care in mental health. In the
Family Health Strategy, we have the privileged locus for the production of new care
technologies, which favor de-medicalization, empowerment and the production of
autonomy of subjects in psychological distress and mental disorders. Among these
technologies, we can consider that Autonomous Medication Management (GAM) is a
group strategy with potential for emancipatory care, constituting a concrete tool to
face the problem of medicalization of life. Thus, we aimed to investigate the limits
and potentialities of GAM as a strategy of care and coping with medicalization in the
context of the Family Health Strategy in a municipality in the interior of Rio Grande do
Norte-RN. This is a research with a qualitative approach, which was developed
around an intervention performed in the context of PHC, having as its ability to
interfere in the reality studied and modify it, analyzing its effects for the participants.
The instruments used were: the realization of a GAM intervention group over eight
months, observant participation, and the construction of narratives from the
experience with the group. In addition, field diaries and audio recording were used to
record the experiment. The GAM group consisted of FHS users who make use of
psychotropic drugs as well as members of the local NASF-AB team. For the
constitution of the corpus of analysis the audio transcription records of the meetings,
the researcher's field diaries and validated collective narratives were used. The
results show that the process of medication permeates the practices of professionals
and is configured as the main offer of care, the demands of psychic \ ethical-political
suffering of women users in the FHS, who use psychiatric drugs as silencers of their
anxieties associated with the female condition. and being a woman in her concrete
realities due. The experience with GAM has shown to be a potentiator of
demedicalizing actions, pointing out ways to incorporate new relationships and social
dynamics in the territory. It was shown as a participative and reflective methodology
with the ability to trigger self-knowledge, autonomy, and action power for all subjects.
Its use promoted the expansion of dialogue, the exchange of experiences with the
use of medication, building meaningful experiences in the different dimensions of
people's lives: social, family and individual. The GAM also proved to be potent to
establish health promotion spaces in the FHS, considering that the GAM guide was
thus constituted as a group facilitator tool in this context. We conclude that GAM has
strategic potential to face the medicalization of life in the FHS, as well as a care and
attention tool for mental health production in PHC.