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Healthcare in Portugal is provided through three coexisting systems: the National Health Service (Portuguese: Serviço Nacional de Saúde, SNS), special social health insurance schemes for certain professions (health subsystems) and voluntary private health insurance.
The INSA has operating units in its headquarters in Lisbon, Porto (in two centers: Center for Public Health Doctor Gonçalves Ferreira and Center for Medical Genetics Jacinto Magalhães) and Águas de Moura (Center for Studies on Vectors and Infectious Diseases Dr. Francisco Cambournac).
In 2022, Portugal registered a total of 10,270,873 inhabitants with a expected decrease of 9.8% to 9,261,313 by 2050. [1] The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 12.3% of the population is between 0-14 years, 68.2% is estimated to be 15-64 years and 19.5% is expected to be 65+ years old.
Trofa (Portuguese pronunciation: ⓘ) is a city and a municipality in the north of the Porto metropolitan area in Portugal, 18 kilometres (11 mi) from Porto. The population in 2021 was 38,548, [ 1 ] in an area of 72.02 square kilometres (27.81 sq mi). [ 2 ]
Trofa, Segadães e Lamas do Vouga is a freguesia in Águeda Municipality, Aveiro District, Portugal. [1] The population in 2011 was 4,630, [ 2 ] in an area of 16.07 km 2 . [ 3 ] The Ponte do Cabeço do Vouga and the Igreja de Trofa are located in this freguesia.
In Portugal, ENES is an acronym for 'Exames Nacionais do Ensino Secundário' (Secondary Education National Exams). Specifically, the ENES Sheet is a document containing the students final secondary education classification as well as the exam results of the "provas específicas" (specific exams) used to apply to university or polytechnical institutions.
Duarte de Lemos (c. 1480 – 27 June 1558), 3rd Lord of Trofa, was a 16th century Portuguese nobleman, soldier and donatary.In Brazil, he was Lord of the island of Santo Antônio, the present-day island of Vitória, where the capital of the state of Espírito Santo was founded.
In 1499, King D. Afonso V made Gomes Martins de Lemos the 1st Lord of Trofa. In 1522, his grandson Duarte de Lemos, 3rd Lord of Trofa, ordered the construction of a funerary chapel in the parish of Trofa. [1] Between 1536 and 1539, the parietal tombs and statuary were constructed. [1]