TROPICAL DISEASES IN THE AMAZON: CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL CHALLENGES AND MULTIPROFESSIONAL STRATEGIES FOR PREVENTION, CONTROL, AND COMPREHENSIVE CARE

Authors

  • Neide Garcia Ribeiro
  • Mariana Elizabeth Lopes de Sales
  • Luis Filipe Pinto Barbosa
  • Micheline Santos da Fonseca
  • Sirlene de Miranda Julião
  • Jander Marcus Cirino Lopes
  • Eduardo Silva Rodrigues
  • Priscila Bezerra de Lima
  • Leidiane Braz de Sousa
  • Danyelle Karine de Oliveira Baquer
  • Cleiton Mendes Honorato Sousa
  • Larissa Emanuelle Sestari
  • José Mario Guerra de Lima
  • Heráclito Ferreira Neto
  • Lauriene Karina Ramos da Costa Ferreira
  • Graziele Queiroz Mazete Maran
  • Jean Claude Martins de Andrade
  • Anna Monise Rigon Von Heimburg
  • Rosana Pereira Medina Freitas
  • Katia Pinheiro de Oliveira Tonette
  • Rafaela Baliot de Souza
  • Anna Catharinna da Costa
  • Mirlene Nascimento de Jesus
  • Elda Lenilma Palheta Alves
  • Patrícia dos Santos Moutinho Coelho

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56238/sevened2026.002-021

Keywords:

Tropical Diseases, Amazon, Multiprofessional Team, Public Health, Comprehensive Care

Abstract

Tropical diseases remain a major public health challenge in the Brazilian Amazon, particularly due to environmental, social, and structural conditions that favor their persistence. This study aimed to analyze the contemporary clinical challenges of major tropical diseases in the Amazon and to discuss multiprofessional strategies for prevention, control, and comprehensive care for affected populations. This qualitative theoretical-analytical investigation was based on an integrative literature review conducted in SciELO, BVS/LILACS, PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar, including studies published between 2015 and 2025. The findings indicate that diseases such as malaria, dengue, leishmaniasis, Chagas disease, leprosy, and tuberculosis remain concentrated in areas with high socio-environmental vulnerability, requiring coordinated action among physicians, nurses, pharmacists, physiotherapists, nutritionists, dentists, and community health workers. Multiprofessional practice demonstrated positive effects on early diagnosis, treatment adherence, rehabilitation, and community prevention. It is concluded that addressing tropical diseases in the Amazon depends on the integration of epidemiological surveillance, territory-sensitive public policies, and continuous multiprofessional care capable of promoting comprehensive, humanized, and effective healthcare.

Published

2026-03-05

How to Cite

Ribeiro, N. G., de Sales, M. E. L., Barbosa, L. F. P., da Fonseca, M. S., Julião, S. de M., Lopes, J. M. C., Rodrigues, E. S., de Lima, P. B., de Sousa, L. B., Baquer, D. K. de O., Sousa, C. M. H., Sestari, L. E., de Lima, J. M. G., Ferreira Neto, H., Ferreira, L. K. R. da C., Maran, G. Q. M., de Andrade, J. C. M., Von Heimburg, A. M. R., Freitas, R. P. M., … Coelho, P. dos S. M. (2026). TROPICAL DISEASES IN THE AMAZON: CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL CHALLENGES AND MULTIPROFESSIONAL STRATEGIES FOR PREVENTION, CONTROL, AND COMPREHENSIVE CARE. Seven Editora, 302-317. https://doi.org/10.56238/sevened2026.002-021