Cristina Possas

Cristina Possas

Cristina Possas, PhD
Born (1948-06-05) June 5, 1948
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Residence Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Nationality Brazilian
Citizenship Brazil
Alma mater
Occupation Minister of health, public health research scientist, infectious disease research scientist, academic
Years active 1985 — present
Known for social epidemiology, Medical research,
public health,
infectious disease,
Emerging infectious disease
Home town Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Title Professor
Fiocruz

Cristina Possas de Albuquerque (Cristina Possas), PhD (5 June 1948 –), is a Brazilian public health scientist working with infectious diseases and emerging infectious diseases from an eco-social perspective.[1][2] However, her approach to social ecosystem complexity is quite different from the four-fold eco-social approach of Harvard's Nancy Krieger in that she has proposed in a 2001 English-language article in the Brazilian Journal of Public Health Reports the concept of "social ecosystem health" where ecosystems are increasingly changed by social human activity, favoring the emergence of diseases, so the term "social" should precede the prefix "eco".[3][4] [5] Thus, she is known for (a) developing her new conceptual approach to social epidemiology, incorporating the economic concept of structural heterogeneity into an epidemiological model to identify the epidemiological profiles of heterogeneous populations in different social and economic strata and the conditions for emergence of diseases; (b) contributions of health policy and health reform in Brazil; and research on health transition, ecological change, complex systems, and emergence of new diseases.

She is a Takemi Fellow at Harvard University in Boston,[6][7] where for 10 years she has been a Visiting Scientist and a Fulbright Fellow, and a professor at FIOCRUZ in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[8]

Career

Façade of the Neo-Mouresque Palace of Manguinhos, seat of the Instituto Oswaldo Cruz in Rio de Janeiro.

As a Brazilian Brazilian public health scientist working with infectious diseases from an eco-social perspective,[9] Cristina Possas de Albuquerque (Cristina Possas) has as a policymaker long worked closely with public health and environmental scientists and with human rights and social justice civil organizations.

She also is a full professor at FIOCRUZ in Brazil, where in 1998 she had earned a PhD in public health, and where she now does research on infectious diseases and teaches a course named "Scientific Methodology" in the Masters and Doctoral Programs.

She has been also a Professor of Health Policy at the National School of Public Health at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Brazil. She was nominated in 1987 by the Brazilian Ministry of Health/Fiocruz to be the National Technical Coordinator of seven Groups supporting the Health Reform in Brazil, whose contributions were later incorporated into the new Brazilian 1988 Constitution.

For a decade, she also has been a Takemi Fellow at Harvard University, a Visiting Scientist and Fulbright Fellow, and a member of the Harvard New Diseases Group, coordinated by the late Richard Levins and by Tamara Awerbuch-Friedlander, collaborating with them and other outstanding members of the group in the organizing committee of the Woods Hole Conference on New Diseases, with articles with the group later published in a special supplement of the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences on this conference and in other journals. She had held for 10 years a national position as the Head of the Research and Development Unit of the Brazilian National AIDS Program.

She has worked for more than five decades in several national and international positions with the scientific community and civil society organizations. For ten years, she had been National Director of the Research and Technological Development Unit at the Brazilian AIDS Program in the Brazilian Ministry of Health, which has been recognized globally as an outstanding public health initiative with innovative approaches to the pandemics, always centering on free and universal access to prevention and treatment. She was invited by the Director of the National AIDS Program to conceive and create a new and innovative Research and Technological Development Unit in the Program’s structure.

She has given interviews on AIDS,[10] dengue, and zika.[11]

Recent experience

Coordinated Master’s, Doctoral, and Post-Doctoral Programs in Public Health and Clinical Research on Infectious Diseases.

Appointments

FIOCRUZ

1985–present - Full professor and researcher at FIOCRUZ (Master, Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Programs in Clinical Research on Infectious Diseases). Scientific Advisor for the President of the Policy and Strategy Council of Bio-Manguinhos.

Positions:

NATIONAL TECHNICAL BIOSAFETY COMMISSION - CTNBio

NATIONAL AIDS PROGRAM

HARVARD UNIVERSITY

STATE OF SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL

PUC OF CAMPINAS, SP.

CITY OF CAMPINAS, SP

UNICAMP, SP

Education

Languages

Major publications

Dr. Possas's writings are in six broad areas:

These numerous writings include:

Books published

Working papers

Awards and honors

See also

Outside references

References

  1. Krieger, N., "Epidemiology and the web of causation: has anyone seen the spider?" Social Science and Medicine 1994; 39:887–903
  2. Krieger, Nancy (2011). Epidemiology and the People's Health : Theory and Context. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199750351.
  3. Possas, C. 2001. Social ecosystem health: confronting the complexity and emergence of infectious diseases. Cadernos de Saúde Pública (Brazilian Journal pf Public Health Reports) 17.1: 30-41.
  4. Possas, C. 2001 Debate on the paper by David Waltner-Toews. Cadernos de Saúde Pública (Brazilian Journal pf Public Health Reports), 17, S27-S28.
  5. Levins, R. and Lopez C. "Toward an ecosocial view of health", International Journal of Health Services 29(2):261-293, 1999. Her mentor and former colleague, Dr. Richard Levins, had used the phrase "ecosocial view of health."
  6. Takemi Program, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  7. Cristina Possas: Zika and Dengue in Brazil: ecological, social, and anthropological perspectives
  8. FIOCRUZ Faculty profile for Cristina de Albuquerque Possas, PhD
  9. Cristina Possas: Zika and Dengue in Brazil: ecological, social, and anthropological perspectives
  10. Entrevista, Dr. Cristina Possas discusses AIDS, Dec 16, 2015
  11. Cristina Possas: Zika and Dengue in Brazil: ecological, social, and anthropological perspectives
  12. CNPq profile for Cristina de Albuquerque Possas
  13. Takemi Program, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  14. CNPq profile for Cristina de Albuquerque Possas
  15. CNPq profile for Cristina de Albuquerque Possas
  16. CNPq profile for Cristina de Albuquerque Possas
  17. United States Regulatory Agencies Unified Biotechnology Website Archived November 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
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