SOCIO-ANTHROPOLOGY OF HIV/AIDS, ETHNIC-RACIAL CONTEXT AND NURSING CARE
Keywords:
Collective health, Amazonia of Pará, Racism, Social anthropologyAbstract
Dialogues, studies, ongoing disciplines. Readings of decolonial theories. Dimensioning of different situations of oppression, defined from ethnic or racial boundaries, following, among these, the contributions of Lélia Gonzalez, Julieta Paredes and Zélia Amador. Women of political and intellectual insertion who deepen historical nuances about Latin America and theoretical basis of invisibilities of black populations, especially those who live in the northern region of Brazil. Approaches to contribute to PhD questions. Feasibilities to decolonize the understanding of reality imposed by the domination of power, knowledge, and being, which are very much the basis of our epistemic logic. The structure of this study follows a development based on texts that dialogue with the decolonial epistemological understanding along with the research project. It is set in the interaction between society, Nursing and the dimensioning of the social practice of this profession in the Amazonian territory. Scope of theoretical discussion and Nursing among its multiple insertions of care for the individual and community. From social nursing to the encounter of knowledge, from intellectuality in the face of people's relationships in their cultural contexts. Interaction and doctoral propositions in Home care: interface between Nursing, 'living' with HIV/AIDS and therapeutic home care. Documenting health care among people and nursing professionals using anthropology as a tool to understand health practices. We aspire that Nursing establishes itself in this field of knowledge and that it also formulates incisive criticisms of reductionist concepts and practices.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Marta Giane Machado Torres

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.