5 resultados para Demographic transition
em Repositório Institucional UNESP - Universidade Estadual Paulista "Julio de Mesquita Filho"
Resumo:
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
Resumo:
A proporção de idosos no Brasil vem crescendo consideravelmente e essa transição demográfica traz um quadro em que cada vez mais a sobrevivência deles fica dependente de seus familiares. Para aprimorar a qualidade de vida desse grupo há a proposta da elaboração de um programa de capacitação que contribua para melhorar os serviços prestados a estes indivíduos. O objetivo do presente estudo é avaliar um Programa de Capacitação para Cuidadores Informais na qualidade de vida de idosos. Foram realizadas visitas às residências de 15 idosos com déficit de autocuidado, onde foi aplicado o questionário SF-36. em seguida realizou-se um programa multiprofissional de capacitação para seus cuidadores. Após 2 meses aplicou-se novamente o questionário para verificar a eficácia do programa de capacitação na qualidade de vida dos idosos. Houve um aumento significativo dos escores relacionados ao domínio saúde mental e uma diminuição significativa dos relacionados às limitações por aspectos físicos. A partir dos dados obtidos concluiu-se que deve ser incentivada a formação de grupos de cuidadores informais, conduzidos por profissionais da área de saúde, para fomentar o conhecimento, a troca de experiências e a discussão sobre estratégias para melhorar o ato de cuidar.
Resumo:
Pós-graduação em Saúde Coletiva - FMB
Resumo:
The proposed work aims to analyze the due process of demographic transition and pronounced population aging present in the city of Rio Claro-SP and the implications that such situation entails the locality. Given that the city is at an advanced point of this phenomenon is noticed a large contingent of people aged over 65 years living on site, so they depend on actions in order to live with dignity. Therefore, the project has the aim of investigating the evolution of population, mainly focusing on the plot elderly, verifying the importance of state enterprises that were present in the town in the lives of citizens, for example, FEPASA and Cesp
Resumo:
Mortality factors that act sequentially through the demographic transitions from seed to sapling may have critical effects on recruitment success. Understanding how habitat heterogeneity influences the causal factors that limit propagule establishment in natural populations is central to assess these demographic bottlenecks and their consequences. Bamboos often influence forest structure and dynamics and are a major factor in generating landscape complexity and habitat heterogeneity in tropical forests. To understand how patch heterogeneity influences plant recruitment we studied critical establishment stages during early recruitment of Euterpe edulis, Sloanea guianensis and Virola bicuhyba in bamboo and non-bamboo stands in the Brazilian Atlantic forest. We combined observational studies of seed rain and seedling emergence with seed addition experiments to evaluate the transition probabilities among regeneration stages within bamboo and non-bamboo stands. The relative importance of each mortality factor was evaluated by determining how the loss of propagules affected stage-specific recruitment success. Our results revealed that the seed addition treatment significantly increased seedling survivorship for all three species. E. edulis seedling survival probability increased in the addition treatment in the two stand types. However, for S. guianensis and V. bicuhyba this effect depended strongly on artificially protecting the seeds, as both species experienced increased seed and seedling losses due to post-dispersal seed predators and herbivores. Propagules of all three species had a greater probability of reaching subsequent recruitment stages when protected. The recruitment of large-seeded V. bicuhyba and E. edulis appears to be much more limited by post-dispersal factors than by dispersal limitation, whereas the small-seeded S. guianensis showed an even stronger effect of post-dispersal factors causing recruitment collapse in some situations. We demonstrated that E. edulis, S. guianensis and V. bicuhyba are especially susceptible to predation during early compared with later establishment stages and this early stage mortality can be more crucial than stand differences as determinants of successful regeneration. Among-species differences in the relative importance of dispersal vs. establishment limitation are mediated by variability in species responses to patch heterogeneity. Thus, bamboo effects on the early recruitment of non-bamboo species are patchy and species-specific, with successional bamboo patches exerting a far-reaching influence on the heterogeneity of plant species composition and abundance. © 2012 Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics.