Artículos de revistas
Epidemiology, biodiversity, and technological trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon: from malaria to Covid-19
Fecha
2021-07-13Registro en:
2296-2565
Autor
Codeço, Cláudia Torres
Dal´asta, Ana P
Rorato, Ana C
Lana, Raquel M
Neves, Tatiana C
Andreazzi, Cecilia S
Barbosa, Milton
Escada, Maria Isabel S
Fernandes, Danilo A
Rodrigues, Danuzia L
Reis, Izabel Cristina
da Silva-Nunes, Mônica
Gontijo, Alexandre B
Coelho, Flávio Codeço
Monteiro, Antonio M V
Institución
Resumen
The Amazon biome is under severe threat due to increasing deforestation rates
and loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services while sustaining a high burden of
neglected tropical diseases. Approximately two thirds of this biome are located within
Brazilian territory. There, socio-economic and environmental landscape transformations
are linked to the regional agrarian economy dynamics, which has developed into
six techno-productive trajectories (TTs). These TTs are the product of the historical
interaction between Peasant and Farmer and Rancher practices, technologies and
rationalities. This article investigates the distribution of the dominant Brazilian Amazon
TTs and their association with environmental degradation and vulnerability to neglected
tropical diseases. The goal is to provide a framework for the joint debate of the local
economic, environmental and health dimensions. We calculated the dominant TT for
each municipality in 2017. Peasant trajectories (TT1, TT2, and TT3) are dominant in
ca. fifty percent of the Amazon territory, mostly concentrated in areas covered by
continuous forest where malaria is an important morbidity and mortality cause. Cattle
raising trajectories are associated with higher deforestation rates. Meanwhile, Farmer and
Rancher economies are becoming dominant trajectories, comprising large scale cattle
and grain production. These trajectories are associated with rapid biodiversity loss and
a high prevalence of neglected tropical diseases, such as leishmaniasis, Aedes-borne
diseases and Chagas disease. Overall, these results defy simplistic views that the
dominant development trajectory for the Amazon will optimize economic, health and
environmental indicators. This approach lays the groundwork for a more integrated
narrative consistent with the economic history of the Brazilian Amazon