The rights transferred include the publication of the article in all forms, including print, magnetic, or electronic, or in all other forms or by any means of dissemination that exist or that may be developed in the future, as well as producing publications through the total or partial concession of licenses to third parties.Īccepted papers will be published in Salud Pública de México under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.Īll proposed articles must be original and not previously published, and may not be submitted to any other journal while under consideration by Salud Pública de México. In proposing articles for publication, the authors accept the conditions contained in the current guidelines and transfer the copyright of the article in question to Salud Pública de México for editing, publishing, reproducing, disseminating, and commercial purposes, as well as for translating or authorizing the translation of the article into any language. Study findings suggest that investments should be made to disseminate appropriate knowledge on VH prevention, mainly addressing sexual transmission and intravenous drug use. “Right” scores for transmission mechanisms and prevention practices varied from zero to 80%.
#Bloodborne pc fecha Pc#
For PC items, “food-and waterborne” answers were followed by “general aspects of prevention” (13%), “immunization” (9%), “quality of health services” (8%) and “sexual prevention” (5%) items. For TC, “food-and waterborne” answers were followed by “bloodborne” (16%), “inadequate knowledge” (9%), “possible causes of hepatic disease” (9%), and “sexual transmission” (7%) answers. Transmission category (TC) (n=837 answers) and prevention category (PC) (n=771 answers) “food-and waterborne” transmission items were the most frequently mentioned (40%). Comparison of the answer frequencies between cities was done through the chi-square test. Data were tabulated and analyzed using EPIINFO 6.04 and open answers were classified according to semantic content. Cultural differences in knowledge were identified using a questionnaire to classify, according to semantic content, categories of transmission and preventive practices. The sample was composed of 360 subjects: 334 women and 26 men, 81 (22.5%) from Belém, 123 (34.2%) from Natal and 156 (43.3%) from Rio de Janeiro. A cross-sectional study was conducted in three cities of Brazil, from August to November of 1999. To assess school teachers’ level of knowledge on prevention of viral hepatitis (VH). Hepatitis, viral, human, awarenes, Brasil, prevention practices, Brazil Abstract Preventive Medicine Department and Rio de Janeiro Federal University Public Health Nucleus, Brazil. Rio de Janeiro Federal University Public Health Nucleus Rio de Janeiro State Ministry of Health and Brazil’s Ministry of Health, Brazil.