ObjectiveTo assess public services attending female victims of sexual violence in the city of Sao Paulo. Methods This is a qualitative study conducted in two public services attending female victims of sexual violence. Interviews with 42 women were conducted, 13 of whom had sought these services for assistance and 29 were professionals working in these services. Evaluation of the services was based on the categories: reception, access, resolvability and sanitary responsibility.
ResultsThe analysis of the interviews per category has shown that there was reception in both services, problems with respect to access due to the lack of information concerning these services, and quality resolvability with a multi-professional team. As to the sanitary responsibility, it is present in these specialized services but is deficient in the emergency services and basic health care units. Many women are unaware of the rights they are entitled to with respect to specialized services. Frequently their late arrival compromises the efficacy of care. There are deficiencies both in terms of reference and counter reference.
ConclusionsThe results ratify the importance of these services and the need for their decentralized expansion. Health courses should introduce the theme of sexual violence at the undergraduate level.
The class Kinetoplastea encompasses both free-living and parasitic species from a
wide range of hosts. Several representatives of this group are responsible for severe
human diseases and for economic losses in agriculture and livestock. While this group
encompasses over 30 genera, most of the available information has been derived from
the vertebrate pathogenic genera Leishmaniaand
Trypanosoma. Recent studies of the previously neglected groups of
Kinetoplastea indicated that the actual diversity is much higher than previously
thought. This article discusses the known segment of kinetoplastid diversity and how
gene-directed Sanger sequencing and next-generation sequencing methods can help to
deepen our knowledge of these interesting protists.
In the present work, we investigated molecular mechanisms governing thermal resistance of a monoxenous trypanosomatid Crithidia luciliae thermophila, which we reclassified as a separate species C. thermophila. We analyzed morphology, growth kinetics, and transcriptomic profiles of flagellates cultivated at low (23°C) and elevated (34°C) temperature. When maintained at high temperature, they grew significantly faster, became shorter, with genes involved in sugar metabolism and mitochondrial stress protection significantly upregulated. Comparison with another thermoresistant monoxenous trypanosomatid, Leptomonas seymouri, revealed dramatic differences in transcription profiles of the two species with only few genes showing the same expression pattern. This disparity illustrates differences in the biology of these two parasites and distinct mechanisms of their thermotolerance, a prerequisite for living in warm-blooded vertebrates.
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