Resultados: 6
#1
au:Muñoz García, Araceli
Filtros
Ordenar por
Página
de 1
Próxima
1.
¿Sabemos lo que comemos?: Percepciones sobre el riesgo alimentario en Cataluña, España
Facebook Twitter
![CC-BY/4.0](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/open-access-icon.png)
Facebook Twitter
- Outras redes sociais
- Google+
- StambleUpon
- CiteULike
- Mendeley
- Outras redes
- Métricas
ABSTRACT This article describes and analyzes social perceptions regarding food risks in Catalonia (Spain). In particular it uses the narratives of informants to determine which foods are perceived as dangerous and how, when, where and why this perception of risk develops. Through a qualitative research study, we explored how lay discourses are constructed and managed, creating diverse imaginaries regarding food risk that do not always coincide with the biomedical view. It is highlighted that food risk is not always associated with the dangers of progress or industrialization, nor is it necessarily focused on the dichotomous debate of “industrially produced food” versus “natural food”; rather food risk perceptions revolve around a series of possibilities that are also related to the production, distribution, preparation and/or consumption of food.
RESUMEN En este artículo se describen y analizan las percepciones sociales sobre el riesgo alimentario en Cataluña (España), que inciden en qué alimentos son percibidos como peligrosos, pero también en cómo, cuándo, dónde, por qué y de qué manera se concibe este riesgo a partir de las narrativas de los informantes. A través de un estudio cualitativo, se ha explorado cómo se construyen y gestionan los discursos legos, que conforman imaginarios diversos sobre el riesgo alimentario que no siempre coinciden con la mirada biomédica. Se señala que el riesgo sobre los alimentos no siempre se asocia a los peligros del progreso o la industrialización, ni se centra necesariamente en el debate dicotómico “alimento industrializado” versus “alimento natural”, sino en un conjunto de posibilidades que tienen que ver también con el contexto de su producción, distribución, preparación y/o consumo.
https://doi.org/10.18294/sc.2016.932
489 downloads
2.
¿Sabemos lo que comemos?: Percepciones sobre el riesgo alimentario en Cataluña, España
Facebook Twitter
![CC-BY-NC/4.0](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/open-access-icon.png)
Facebook Twitter
- Outras redes sociais
- Google+
- StambleUpon
- CiteULike
- Mendeley
- Outras redes
- Métricas
ABSTRACT This article describes and analyzes social perceptions regarding food risks in Catalonia (Spain). In particular it uses the narratives of informants to determine which foods are perceived as dangerous and how, when, where and why this perception of risk develops. Through a qualitative research study, we explored how lay discourses are constructed and managed, creating diverse imaginaries regarding food risk that do not always coincide with the biomedical view. It is highlighted that food risk is not always associated with the dangers of progress or industrialization, nor is it necessarily focused on the dichotomous debate of “industrially produced food” versus “natural food”; rather food risk perceptions revolve around a series of possibilities that are also related to the production, distribution, preparation and/or consumption of food.
RESUMEN En este artículo se describen y analizan las percepciones sociales sobre el riesgo alimentario en Cataluña (España), que inciden en qué alimentos son percibidos como peligrosos, pero también en cómo, cuándo, dónde, por qué y de qué manera se concibe este riesgo a partir de las narrativas de los informantes. A través de un estudio cualitativo, se ha explorado cómo se construyen y gestionan los discursos legos, que conforman imaginarios diversos sobre el riesgo alimentario que no siempre coinciden con la mirada biomédica. Se señala que el riesgo sobre los alimentos no siempre se asocia a los peligros del progreso o la industrialización, ni se centra necesariamente en el debate dicotómico “alimento industrializado” versus “alimento natural”, sino en un conjunto de posibilidades que tienen que ver también con el contexto de su producción, distribución, preparación y/o consumo.
https://doi.org/10.18294/sc.2016.932
117 downloads
3.
Trabajos de investigación presentados en el XLIX Congreso Mexicano de Anestesiología: Zacatecas 2015. México
Facebook Twitter
![CC-BY-NC/4.0](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/open-access-icon.png)
Facebook Twitter
- Outras redes sociais
- Google+
- StambleUpon
- CiteULike
- Mendeley
- Outras redes
- Métricas
Sánchez, Claudia
; Osorio-Santiago, María Arelí
; Medina-Tarango, Marco Antonio
; Fernandez De Lara, Alfredo
; Castro-Salinas, Jose Ernesto
; Salazar-Luna, Miguel Angel
; Sanchez, Placido
; Castro-Cayetano, José Esteban
; Millán Hernández, Manuel
; Almonte, Hector Asencion
; Zamora-Aguirre, Salvador A.
; Gudiño, Yocelin Montserrat
; Reyes-Valle, Roberto
; Zepeda-Olivera, Silvia
; Ferretiz-López, Giancarlo
; Salgado, Mónica
; Moctezuma-Ramírez, Luis
; Hernández-Ortiz, Israel Ivan
; Hernández-Zenteno, Norma Angelica
; Martinez, Raquel
; Sánchez-Hernández, Eloy
; Camacho-Gómez, Aldo Constantino
; Martinez, Raquel
; Chenge-Said, Jarumi
; Flores Fonseca, Elvia
; López-Centeno, Martha Alicia
; López, Angélica Yanine
; Jiménez-Ramos, Adriana
; Velasco-Sordo, Luis Ramón
; Hurtado-Reyes, Ignacio Carlos
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Rojas-Peñaloza, Janeth
; Zapién-Madrigal, Jesús Miguel
; Sánchez, Placido
; Sánchez-López, Eric Mauricio
; Mendoza- García, María Isabel
; Calzada-Grijalba, José Francisco
; Hernandez, Israel Ivan
; Castellanos De León, Edgar
; Luna Medina, Cinthya Isabel
; Alvarez-Mora, Lucy Andrea
; López, Angélica Yanine
; Jiménez-Ramos, Adriana
; Velasco-Sordo, Luis Ramón
; Hurtado-Reyes, Ignacio Carlos
; Diaz, Erica Raquel
; Hernandez-Gutierrez, Deoselina
; Gargiulo, Paul Raphael
; Barragán, Maria Jimena
; Ham Mancilla, Ofelia
; Zamora- Gutiérrez, Ana Lilia
; Arteaga, Jaime
; Hernández-Gutierrez, Deoselina
; Ríos-Navarro, Ramón Alejandro
; Romo-Serrano, Erika
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Zapién-Madrigal, Jesús Miguel
; Rojas- Peñaloza, Janeth
; Garduño, Araceli Marselle
; Flores-Rodriguez, Alfonso de Jesus
; Cuervo-Ggonzalez, Alma Kenia
; Puente-Solorio, Armando
; Benitez-Rebollar, Joel Enrique
; Gaona-Valle, Laura Soraya
; Jaime, Mayra Alicia
; Ortega-Suarez, Lizbeth
; Barrientos-Quintanilla, Luis Alberto
; Alvarado-Ramos, Salomon
; Moya-Morales, Yuliana
; Ferretiz, Giancarlo
; César, Julio
; Yañez, Pablo
; Reyes-Valle, Roberto
; Colores-Velazquez, Julio César
; Luna, Arístides De Jesús
; Almonte, Hector Asencion
; Márquez-Noyola, Elizabeth Alicia
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Barrera, Lorena
; Cabrera-Sánchez, Miroslava
; Fernanández-Muñoz, Angel Fernando
; Rolón-Sánchez, Yumara Georgina
; Barragán-Hernández, Adriana Guadalupe
; Lòpez, Estefania
; Osorio-Santiago, Maria Areli
; Muñoz, Beatriz Adelaida
; Cruz-Bautista, Mayra Ivette De La
; Ripoll-Aburto, Carlos Andres
; Ortiz-Maldonado, Jessie Karolina
; Hernández-Rasgado, Javier
; Cuj-Díaz, Alberto
; Sanchez, Placido
; Sarmiento, Lina
; Peña-Olvera, Silvia
; Santiago-Poot, Nohemí
; López, Angélica Yanine
; Jiménez-Ramos, Adriana
; Hurtado-Reyes, Ignacio Carlos
; Ferretiz, Giancarlo
; Pablo-Yañez, Julio César
; Flores-Martinez, Juan Ramón
; Chavez-Contreras, Sara Idali
; Gudiño-Larios, Yocelin Montserrat
; Velazquez, Sara
; Vences-Perez, Noemi Dolores
; Ayala-Bermudez, Celina Alejandra
; Garcia-Castro, Marco Tulio
; Gordillo-Parra, Alejandra
; Barrera, Lorena
; Cabrera-Sánchez, Miroslava
; Martínez-García, Claudia Lizeth
; Zuñiga-Iñiguez, Paloma
; Anaya-Romo, Eduardo
; Antelo-Corral, Jaqueline
; Ramos, Perla Del Carmen
; Hernández-Rasgado, Javier
; Cuj-Díaz, Alberto
; Fonz-Murillo, Elma Patricia
; Cruz-Bautista, Mayra Ivette De la
; Ripoll-Aburto, Carlos Andres
; Cruz, Mayra Ivette De La
; Cuj-Díaz, Alberto
; Hernández-Rasgado, Javier
; Vega-Cano, Miguel
; Ramos-Rodríguez, Perla del Carmen
; Muñoz-Hernández, Beatriz Adelaida
; Caceres, Leonardo Andres
; Arteaga-Favela, Claudia Berenice
; Nava-Osorio, Alejandro
; Arce-Bojorquez, Brisceyda
; Urias, Emma
; Rosario-Ayala, Yuridia Del
; Salazar-Castro, Laura Elena
; Nieblas-Torres, Mariela Lizet
; Arce-Bojorquez, Brisceyda
; Prince-Angulo, Silvia Annel
; Espinoza-Quintero, Erendira
; Alzate, Ana Lizette
; Camacho, Jesus Erick
; Aviles-Lozoya, Jose Trinidad
; Urias, Emma
; Espinoza-Quintero, Erendira
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Cruz, Nora Cecilia
; Rendón-Salazar, Dafne Denisse
; González-Cordero, Gustavo
; Garduño-Chávez, Belia Inés
; Orozco, Arturo Emmanuel
; Guerrero-Morales, Fernando
; Gonzalez-Ortiz, Julio Cesar
; Casillas-Cruz, Angel Alberto
; Aquino-Tamayo, Blanca Olga
; Estrada, Haydeé Lucía
; Soberanes-Alderete, Francisco Javier
; Ojeda-Ramos, Joel
; Martinez-Flores, Carlos
; Sandoval-Rivera, Arturo Guadalupe
; Cáceres-Figeroa, Leonardo Andres
; Ortega, Columba
; Torres-Mata, Lizbeth Yareli
; Peña-Olvera, Silvia
; Huerta, Juana Geraldine
; Sarmiento-Kamar, Rodrigo Ignacio
; Espinoza, Erendira
; Gerardo-Angulo, Alma Ruth
; Nieblas-Torres, Mariela Lizet
; Martinez-Felix, Jesus Israel
; Rochin-Parra, Julia Teresa
; Chavez, Veronica
; Buendía-Roque, Daniel
; Pinales-Aguilar, Guillermina
; Sandoval, Linda Alejandra
; Ovalle-Bueno, Claudia
; Armendáriz-Salinas, Jaime
; Valdovinos, Salvador
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Sandoval, Linda Alejandra
; Medina-Piqué, Sheila
; Aguilar, Hugo
; Barrera, Eduardo
; Márquez, Elizabeth Alicia
; León, Héctor Almonte De
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Rojas-Peñaloza, Janeth
; Zapién-Madrigal, Jesús Miguel
; Paez, Nancy
; Borquez-Torres, Samantha Anabel
; Chinchillas-Chinchillas, Yanira Zelene
; Silva-Romo, Luis Julian
; Aldana, Jorge Pablo
; Hernández-Gutiérrez, Deoselina
; Sánchez-Hernández, Eloy
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Coronel, Berta
; Fuentes-González, Nalleli del Carmen
; Mendoza-García, María Isabel
; Yañez, Gonzalo
; Contreras-Salomón, José Luis
; Garcia-Simbron, Emma
; Chable-Juárez, Randy Josue
; Manriquez-Merino, Ricardo
; Martinez, Raquel
; Chenge-Said, Jarumi
; Hernández Gutiérrez, Deoselina
; Sánchez, Placido
; Arrieta-Ruiz, Marelyn
; González-Velázquez, Felipe
; Estrada-Utrera, Sandra
; Castellanos, Antonio
; Meza, Oscar Eduardo
; Jimenez-Gonzalez, Adriana Guadalupe
; Pilar-Velazquez, Estefania
; Romo-Cortes, Ramona
; Torres-Soto, Maria de la Luz
; Estrada, Maria Sandra
; Espinoza, Cinthia Yadira
; Islas-Ruz, Felix Gilberto
; Perez-Diaz, Roberto
; Manuel-Serna, Roberto Aurelio
; Arce-Bojorquez, Brisceyda
; Medina-Lopez, Francisco de Jesus
; Nieblas-Torres, Mariela Lizet
; Espinoza-Quintero, Erendira
; Ayala-Camargo, Yuridia
; Guadarrama, Hugo
; Flores-Rodriguez, Alfonso de Jesus
; Benitez-Rebollar, Joel Enrique
; Cedillo-Hernandez, Carolina
; Acevedo-Corona, Arturo
; Gaona-Valle, Laura Soraya
; Morfin, Cecilia
; Flores Rodriguez, Alfonso de Jesus
; Cortes-Aceves, Hector Omar
; Rodríguez-Martínez, José Carlos
; Puente Solorio, Armando
; Gaona-Valle, Laura Soraya
; Reyes, Agustin
; Uscanga-Villa, Maria Nieves
; Molina-Rodriguez, Gloria
; Aquino-Tamayo, Blanca Olga
; Cabrera, Francisco
; Motta-Amezquita, Luis Gerardo
; Castellanos-Olivares, Antonio
; Joffre-Mora, Oscar Paul
; Moncada, Adriana Patricia
; Hernandez-Baez, Humberto Trinidad
; Cecilia, Nora
; Garduño-Chávez, Belia Inés
; González-Cordero, Gustavo
; Palacios-Ríos, Dionicio
.
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
5425 downloads
4.
<<Un infinito que no acaba>>. Modelos explicativos sobre la depresión y el malestar emocional entre los adolescentes barceloneses (España). Segunda parte
Facebook Twitter
![CC-BY-NC/4.0](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/open-access-icon.png)
Facebook Twitter
- Outras redes sociais
- Google+
- StambleUpon
- CiteULike
- Mendeley
- Outras redes
- Métricas
2735 downloads
Citado 2 vezes em SciELO
5.
<<Un infinito que no acaba>>. Modelos explicativos sobre la depresión y el malestar emocional entre los adolescentes barceloneses (España). Primera parte
Facebook Twitter
![CC-BY-NC/4.0](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/open-access-icon.png)
Facebook Twitter
- Outras redes sociais
- Google+
- StambleUpon
- CiteULike
- Mendeley
- Outras redes
- Métricas
Introduction In recent years, adolescent mental health has become a health policy priority in the majority of OCDE and European countries. According to the World Health Organization, in Europe some two million children and adolescents suffer from some type of mental disorder, especially depression, which affects 4% of the adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17, and 9% of 18-year-olds. As is also the case for behavioural and anxiety disorders, rates of adolescent depression are on the rise. Several studies associate depression in adolescence with either current or future consumption of psychoactive substances, a diagnosis of severe mental disorder in adulthood, and suicide. Some studies highlight the importance of social factors and lifestyles in the etiology and prognosis of these types of disorders; for example, various forms of social discrimination, abusive parents, and bullying. The incidence and prevalence of depression appear to be increasing among adolescents, as well as self-reported distress among young people and so-called «negative mood states». Despite the importance of depression, sadness, and so-called «negative mood states» among adolescents, there is a clear lack of qualitative studies analyzing these phenomena, and especially of studies that provide knowledge about the perceptions and cultural models of this age group with respect to their own sense of distress and lay strategies for coping with adversity, and the role of social capital as a buffer against it. Objective and methods The objective of this article is to describe the adolescents' explanatory models (EMs) or lay perceptions on depression, sadness, and related factors. With this purpose we performed an ethnographic study in a sample of 49 students (age 15-16) in three public secondary-schools of Barcelona and its metropolitan area using semi-structured interviews, cultural-domains interviews, and focus groups. We employed content analysis and semantic network analysis for qualitative data, and frequency analysis, cultural-consensus analysis, and multidimensional scaling for quantitative data. Results The results outline that adolescents use their own nosologies to define depressive mood states such as «rallado», «burchado», «chof», or «deprimido». These categories are dichotomically organized between passive items (i.e. to feel sadness or loneliness) and active items (i.e. <<to be angry>>). The state of deprimido (being depressed) is related to feelings of physical weariness and apathy. It can be defined as «a culmination of situations that make you feel bad», including the sense of feeling misunderstood by peers and adults, feeling insecure when having to take decisions or with his/her physical appearance, alone or isolated or in a bad mood. A person that is depressed is someone who «isn't in the mood to even speak about anything», that finds him/herself bad because «things haven't turned out as they expected». This leads him/ her «to blame him/herself for things», to have «very low self-esteem», to not «leave the house», to «become closed within himself», to «build a wall» or a «bubble», to think that «nothing is worth anything» and that «the whole world is against him/her». One can cope with that state for being a «bad time in a person's life», but it can also become «a burden that is much more» or «an eternity that never ends». When we asked our adolescents, «how can you tell that a person is sad or worried?», their answers were varied. One of the most common is to show an oscilation between the passive characteristics of discomfort and its active correlate, between isolation and an uneasy response, despite this behavior not being premeditated. A person that is rallada, deprimida or burchada can appear «isolated from society» and feel unaccepted, alone, insecure, apathetic; he/she might «stop talking or interacting with others», find him/herself feeling «tired of everything», downcast, depressive, as if he/she had experienced un bajón (suddenly feeling down); distracted, serious and without smiling, or anxious and nervous, and because of that hurting others although unintentionally. He/she can also sigh and weep, have difficulties to «express him/herself», appear to have «changed» for not behaving as he/she normally does, or have a lost gaze. The perception that adolescents have of a person exhibiting characteristics such as rallada, triste, burchada, or deprimida is not isomorphic with the vision they hold of themselves when they suffered adversity or experienced discomfort in the past. For example, the category rallada is not used very much in these cases, perhaps in order to save a semantic stigmatizing load. They normally define expressions of discomfort in terms such as «a desire to forget about school, of people and of everything», «scream where no one can hear you», «break things or hit someone», self-inflict physical pain «to balance the pain from within with exterior pain», «make someone feel the same as I feel», «flee or run very far», or of locking oneself up in one's bedroom to «cry while listening to music». They also feel powerless before «the things that they can not confront», «inferior to others», worthless, guilty, with difficulties to concentrate and insomnia. The adolescents situate the causes of their afflictions in the universe of their interactions with family members, adults in general, and peers, within situations of pressure and overexertion in daily life. When we segmented dates by gender we observed that male adolescents prioritized the «school loads» before «relations with friends», while female adolescents a higher relevance to these followed by «affective relations». When we asked our informants, «In your opinion, what can be done to help a person your age that is in this state of sadness or discomfort?», the answers were very diverse, but coincided as a whole to empower sociability between peers. It is striking although congruent with available literature that they discard the possibility of accompanying or referring the affected person to a specific professional for help or even suggest him/her to speak to his/her parents, tutors or professors. As a matter of fact, adolescents constitute an age group characterized by their vague consideration of professional resources in their help-seeking processes. Discussion A fundamental reason for the avoidance of professional services by adolescents is the existence of an explanatory model that, contrary to expert discourses from the «psy» field, understands afflictions as products of the social world. If the causes of discomfort are a result of social interactions (conflicts between equals, states of solitude and isolation, lack of recognition or prestige, dissonances with the models of the body and person, problems in the development of their autonomy against the tutelage of adults, etc.), the restitution of wellbeing must structure itself on those same relations and on that same independence in regards to the adult world. Our data points to a need to establish dialogical strategies of intervention. Insofar as adolescents show explanatory models different to the expert and adult systems in general, it is easy for them to feel indifferent to the interventions that do not involve them as active agents. They want to be protagonists of their own stories. For this reason, the promotion of participation and the dialogue of information (expert and lay) are guidelines that, in our opinion, must be present in any intervention in this field. In these strategies we find the possibility of reconverting lay explanatory models and social capital in a fundamental axis of mental health programs for adolescents.
Introducción En los últimos años, la salud mental de los adolescentes se ha convertido en una prioridad de las políticas sanitarias en la mayoría de los países de la OCDE y, especialmente, en Europa. La razón está justificada. Según la OMS, se calcula que dos millones de menores y jóvenes europeos sufren algún tipo de trastorno mental, entre los que destaca la depresión que afecta 4% de los adolescentes de entre 12 y 17 años y 9% de los jóvenes de 18 años. Junto con los trastornos de ansiedad y de conducta, ello dibuja una tendencia a la alza. A pesar de la relevancia de la depresión, la tristeza y los denominados «estados de ánimo negativos» entre los y las adolescentes, existe un claro déficit de investigaciones cualitativas que analicen estos fenómenos, principalmente si hablamos de investigaciones que permitan conocer las percepciones y modelos culturales de este grupo de edad con respecto a su propio malestar, así como sobre sus estrategias profanas para afrontar la adversidad y el papel de su capital social. Esta ausencia de investigaciones entra en contradicción con la importancia que estas variables adquieren en la salud mental y la salud pública contemporáneas. Objetivo y métodos El objetivo de este artículo es analizar los modelos explicativos o percepciones profanas de los adolescentes sobre la depresión, la tristeza y sus factores asociados. Con este propósito se realizó un estudio etnográfico en una muestra de 49 estudiantes (de edad entre 15 y 16 años) en tres centros públicos de enseñanza secundaria de Barcelona y su área metropolitana mediante entrevistas semiestructuradas, entrevistas de dominios culturales y grupos focales. Se empleó el análisis de contenido y de redes semánticas para los datos cualitativos obtenidos y el análisis de frecuencia, de consenso cultural y el escalado multidimensional para los datos cuantitativos. Resultados Los adolescentes utilizan sus propias nosologías para definir sus estados de ánimo como «rallado», «burchado», «chof» o «deprimido». Estas categorías se organizan entre un polo pasivo (sentirse triste o solo, por ejemplo) y otro activo (i.e., «estar enfadado»). Las expresiones del malestar depresivo son detectadas entre los iguales por la gestualidad (i.e., «el rostro», «la mirada») y el comportamiento (i.e., aislamiento social), pero sólo de forma marginal por el bajo rendimiento académico. Las causas de la depresión se vinculan con los conflictos en las relaciones interpersonales con iguales y adultos. No obstante, el proceso de búsqueda de salud o ayuda más común implica a los iguales, ya que los adultos son percibidos únicamente como un recurso para situaciones de gravedad inusual. De hecho, los adolescentes constituyen un grupo de edad caracterizado por considerar vagamente los recursos profesionalizados en sus procesos de búsqueda de ayuda. Discusión Una razón fundamental de la evitación de los servicios profesionales de atención por parte de los adolescentes barceloneses es la existencia de un modelo explicativo que, a diferencia de los discursos expertos en el campo «psi», entiende las aflicciones como productos del mundo social. Si las causas del malestar derivan de las interacciones sociales, la restitución del bienestar debe conformarse a partir de estas mismas relaciones y también de esta misma independencia con respecto al mundo adulto. Si bien los resultados de nuestra investigación no son extrapolables a la población adolescente catalana en general, éstos indican la necesidad de establecer estrategias dialógicas de intervención que permitan reconvertir los modelos explicativos legos y el capital social de los adolescentes en un eje fundamental de los programas en salud mental.
10051 downloads
Citado 2 vezes em SciELO
6.
FASE INTESTINAL DE Trichinella spiralis EN MODELO MURINO
Facebook Twitter
![CC-BY-NC-SA/4.0](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/open-access-icon.png)
Facebook Twitter
- Outras redes sociais
- Google+
- StambleUpon
- CiteULike
- Mendeley
- Outras redes
- Métricas
MORENO GARCÍA, MARÍA ALEJANDRA
; MALDONADO TAPIA, CLAUDIA H
; GARCÍA MAYORGA, ELDA ARACELI
; REVELES HERNÁNDEZ, ROSA GABRIELA
; MUÑOZ ESCOBEDO, JOSÉ JESÚS
.
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
![ORCID](https://search.scielo.org/static/image/authorIcon-orcid.png)
Trichinella spiralis se encuentra principalmente en el hombre, rata, cerdo, perro; puede infectar a cualquier carnívoro u omnívoro. Cuando la carne o sus derivados están contaminados con larvas infectantes (LI) de T. spiralis y son ingeridas éstas pasan al estómago, donde sus cápsulas son disueltas por acción de los jugos gástricos, las larvas son liberadas en pocas horas, después pasan a la porción proximal del intestino delgado, donde se lleva a cabo su desarrollo. El objetivo del presente trabajo fue evaluar la fase intestinal de T. spiralis en un modelo murino. Un lote de 45 ratas Long Evans, se infectaron con aproximadamente 500 LI, y fueron sacrificadas tres diarias por 15 días. Se tomó un segmento de duodeno, yeyuno e íleon y se fijaron en formol al 10% para posteriormente ser procesados en parafina y teñido con hematoxilina-eosina. El resto del intestino delgado fue fraccionado, se incubó a 37 °C por dos horas y el sobrenadante se observó al microscopio de luz. Se encontró que el implante se lleva a cabo a nivel de yeyuno e íleon, que las hembras adultas dan origen aproximadamente 60-80 larvas recién nacidas (LRN), parto vivíparo en un tercio distal y subse-cuentemente son destruidas. Los machos adultos tienen espermatozoides no ciliados.
Trichinella spiralis is a parasitic disease in man, rat, pig, but can infect any carnivorous or omnivorous. When the meat or their derivates are contaminated with infective larvae (il) of T. spiralis pass to the stomach, their capsules are dissolved by the stomach juice, the larvaes are liberated in few hours, and then they pass to the near portion of the slim intestine in which they develop. The objective of the present work was to evaluate the intestine phase of T. spiralis in a murine model. Fourtyfive Long Evans rats were infected with 500 li approximately, then 3 rats were sacrificed everyday over a period of 15 days. A portion of duodenum, jejune and ileum were fixed in formaldehyde 10% and subsequently embeded in paraffin and dyed with hematoxilin-eosina. The rest of the slim intestine was cut and fractionated and incubated at 37 °c for 2 hours; the supernadant was observed unde light microscopy. We observed that the implant of larvae was in the jejune and ileum. The adult females gave origin to approximately 6080 newborn larvaes (LRN) and subsequently were destroyed. The adult male had non-ciliated sperm.
3650 downloads
Exibindo
itens por página
Página
de 1
Próxima
Visualizar estatísticas de
Enviar resultado
Exportar resultados
Sem resultados
Não foram encontrados documentos para sua pesquisa
Glossário e ajuda para busca
Você pode enriquecer sua busca de uma forma muito simples. Use os índices de pesquisa combinados com os conectores (AND ou OR) e especifique cada vez mais sua busca.
Por exemplo, se você deseja buscar artigos sobre
casos de dengue no Brasil em 2015, use:ti:dengue and publication_year:2015 and aff_country:Brasil
Veja abaixo a lista completa de índices de pesquisa que podem ser usados:
Cód. do Índice | Elemento |
---|---|
ti | título do artigo |
au | autor |
kw | palavras-chave do artigo |
subject | assunto (palavras do título, resumo e palavras-chave) |
ab | resumo |
ta | título abreviado da revista (ex. Cad. Saúde Pública) |
journal_title | título completo da revista (ex. Cadernos de Saúde Pública) |
la | código do idioma da publicação (ex. pt - Português, es - Espanhol) |
type | tipo do documento |
pid | identificador da publicação |
publication_year | ano de publicação do artigo |
sponsor | financiador |
aff_country | código do país de afiliação do autor |
aff_institution | instituição de afiliação do autor |
volume | volume do artigo |
issue | número do artigo |
elocation | elocation |
doi | número DOI |
issn | ISSN da revista |
in | código da coleção SciELO (ex. scl - Brasil, col - Colômbia) |
use_license | código da licença de uso do artigo |