{"title":"Infrastructure-health nexus in Brazil: a scoping review.","authors":"Flavio Pinheiro Martins, Carol Vigurs, Mariana Matera Veras, Lusi Morhayim, Monica Lakhanpaul, Priti Parikh","doi":"10.1186/s41256-025-00441-x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Health system development requires robust infrastructure systems support, particularly in countries with significant regional and socioeconomic disparities. Brazil's experience with its Unified Health System offers important insights into how the infrastructure and built environment is linked to health outcomes especially in underserved populations. This scoping review examines how different infrastructure systems such as sanitation, transportation, educational facilities, housing, influence population health in Brazil through two key pathways: (1) their role in shaping environmental conditions that affect health, and (2) their impact on healthcare service delivery among vulnerable populations.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Following PRISMA-ScR checklist, we conducted a systematic search of studies published between 2013-2024 across Scopus, Web of Science, and PubMed databases. Search terms included infrastructure systems (sanitation, transportation, housing, educational facilities), health outcomes (universal health coverage, infectious diseases, maternal health), and population descriptors (vulnerable, indigenous, underserved) combined with Brazil-specific terms. Inclusion criteria focused on studies examining physical infrastructure's impact on health outcomes in underserved Brazilian communities, published in English or Portuguese. After applying exclusion criteria including publication year restrictions, language filters, geographic limitations, duplicate removal, and non-article format exclusions, 68 studies met inclusion criteria following screening and quality assessment using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP) checklist. Our analysis applied an infrastructure framework examining institutional, personal, and material infrastructure dimensions. Data extraction captured infrastructure systems, healthcare service tiers (primary, secondary, tertiary), and specific health outcomes. Synthesis involved thematic analysis to identify patterns in infrastructure-health relationships, revealing three interconnected dimensions that form the Infrastructure-Health Nexus framework.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The study revealed three interconnected dimensions of infrastructure impact: Supporting Health & Wellbeing, Service Access and Delivery, and Community Engagement. This framework shows how sanitation, transportation, educational, housing, and waste management systems affect health outcomes, with underserved populations facing particular challenges. Healthcare workforce programs serve as interim solutions, with educational facilities simultaneously functioning as health hubs for service delivery and community engagement. The study highlights misalignment between infrastructure investment and UHC objectives.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The Infrastructure-Health Nexus framework, building on Buhr's complementarity concept, shows how infrastructure shapes health outcomes through pathways requiring integrated planning. While current research focuses predominantly on primary care aspects, Brazil's epidemiological transition calls for broader health system considerations, suggesting reconceptualization of infrastructure systems planning as integral to health system development.</p>","PeriodicalId":52405,"journal":{"name":"Global Health Research and Policy","volume":"10 1","pages":"42"},"PeriodicalIF":4.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12403449/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Global Health Research and Policy","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1186/s41256-025-00441-x","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Health system development requires robust infrastructure systems support, particularly in countries with significant regional and socioeconomic disparities. Brazil's experience with its Unified Health System offers important insights into how the infrastructure and built environment is linked to health outcomes especially in underserved populations. This scoping review examines how different infrastructure systems such as sanitation, transportation, educational facilities, housing, influence population health in Brazil through two key pathways: (1) their role in shaping environmental conditions that affect health, and (2) their impact on healthcare service delivery among vulnerable populations.
Methods: Following PRISMA-ScR checklist, we conducted a systematic search of studies published between 2013-2024 across Scopus, Web of Science, and PubMed databases. Search terms included infrastructure systems (sanitation, transportation, housing, educational facilities), health outcomes (universal health coverage, infectious diseases, maternal health), and population descriptors (vulnerable, indigenous, underserved) combined with Brazil-specific terms. Inclusion criteria focused on studies examining physical infrastructure's impact on health outcomes in underserved Brazilian communities, published in English or Portuguese. After applying exclusion criteria including publication year restrictions, language filters, geographic limitations, duplicate removal, and non-article format exclusions, 68 studies met inclusion criteria following screening and quality assessment using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP) checklist. Our analysis applied an infrastructure framework examining institutional, personal, and material infrastructure dimensions. Data extraction captured infrastructure systems, healthcare service tiers (primary, secondary, tertiary), and specific health outcomes. Synthesis involved thematic analysis to identify patterns in infrastructure-health relationships, revealing three interconnected dimensions that form the Infrastructure-Health Nexus framework.
Results: The study revealed three interconnected dimensions of infrastructure impact: Supporting Health & Wellbeing, Service Access and Delivery, and Community Engagement. This framework shows how sanitation, transportation, educational, housing, and waste management systems affect health outcomes, with underserved populations facing particular challenges. Healthcare workforce programs serve as interim solutions, with educational facilities simultaneously functioning as health hubs for service delivery and community engagement. The study highlights misalignment between infrastructure investment and UHC objectives.
Conclusions: The Infrastructure-Health Nexus framework, building on Buhr's complementarity concept, shows how infrastructure shapes health outcomes through pathways requiring integrated planning. While current research focuses predominantly on primary care aspects, Brazil's epidemiological transition calls for broader health system considerations, suggesting reconceptualization of infrastructure systems planning as integral to health system development.
背景:卫生系统发展需要强有力的基础设施系统支持,特别是在区域和社会经济差距较大的国家。巴西在统一卫生系统方面的经验为基础设施和建筑环境如何与健康结果联系起来提供了重要见解,特别是在服务不足的人群中。这个范围审查检查了不同的基础设施系统,如卫生,交通,教育设施,住房,如何通过两个关键途径影响巴西人口健康:(1)他们在塑造影响健康的环境条件中的作用,以及(2)他们对弱势群体中医疗保健服务提供的影响。方法:根据PRISMA-ScR检查表,我们对Scopus、Web of Science和PubMed数据库中2013-2024年间发表的研究进行了系统检索。搜索词包括基础设施系统(卫生设施、交通、住房、教育设施)、健康结果(全民健康覆盖、传染病、孕产妇健康)和人口描述词(弱势群体、土著居民、服务不足)以及巴西特有的术语。纳入标准侧重于检查物质基础设施对服务不足的巴西社区健康结果影响的研究,以英语或葡萄牙语发表。在应用包括出版年份限制、语言筛选、地理限制、重复删除和非文章格式排除在内的排除标准后,68项研究在使用关键评估技能计划(CASP)检查表进行筛选和质量评估后符合纳入标准。我们的分析应用了一个基础设施框架,考察了制度、个人和物质基础设施的维度。数据提取捕获基础设施系统、医疗保健服务层(初级、二级、三级)和特定的健康结果。综合涉及专题分析,以确定基础设施-卫生关系的模式,揭示构成基础设施-卫生联系框架的三个相互关联的方面。结果:该研究揭示了基础设施影响的三个相互关联的方面:支持健康与福祉、服务获取和提供以及社区参与。该框架显示了卫生、交通、教育、住房和废物管理系统如何影响健康结果,服务不足的人群面临着特殊挑战。医疗保健人力计划作为临时解决方案,教育设施同时作为提供服务和社区参与的卫生中心。该研究强调了基础设施投资与全民健康覆盖目标之间的不一致。结论:基础设施-卫生关系框架以Buhr的互补性概念为基础,展示了基础设施如何通过需要综合规划的途径影响卫生结果。虽然目前的研究主要集中在初级保健方面,但巴西的流行病学转型要求对卫生系统进行更广泛的考虑,建议将基础设施系统规划重新定义为卫生系统发展的组成部分。
期刊介绍:
Global Health Research and Policy, an open-access, multidisciplinary journal, publishes research on various aspects of global health, addressing topics like health equity, health systems and policy, social determinants of health, disease burden, population health, and other urgent global health issues. It serves as a forum for high-quality research focused on regional and global health improvement, emphasizing solutions for health equity.