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Out of the sauna: sexual health promotion with 'off street' sex workers

机译:走出桑拿房:与“街头”性工作者一起促进性健康

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Women sex workers are very difficult to draw into mainstream healthcare services and therefore present a challenge to services. Women in this client group arc often invisible to service providers because of their reluctance to disclose their work and as a result may receive inappropriate care. Women who work as sex workers, whether "on street" or "off street" experience social exclusion as a result of the work itself. Sex work is a stigmatised activity involving many illegal aspects, therefore being identified as a sex worker in the community or by service providers invariably means facing hostility or discrimination. Sex workers may be reluctant to access services openly for fear of such attitudes or general fear of coming into any contact with statutory agencies that may be perceived as "officialdom". Sex workers often experience further social exclusion because of other factors, which are sometimes interlinked with commercial sex work. These factors may be consequences of sex work (for example, criminal convictions and fines) or causes of becoming involved with the work in the first place (for example, poverty or illegal drug use). Whatever the pathways of cause and effect it is clear that sex workers are not in society's mainstream, a status that is acknowledged as intrinsically health damaging. From the beginning of HIV sex workers were targeted in prevention initiatives. Sex workers were generally perceived as "reservoirs of infection" who could potentially spread the virus into the "mainstream" heterosexual population. HIV prevention strategies developed not out of concern for the women themselves but rather out of their perceived role as "vectors of transmission" to male clients and their partners. Since then it has been broadly acknowledged that initiatives that are non-judgmental and empowering are more useful than those that stigmatise and blame.
机译:女性性工作者很难吸引主流医疗服务,因此对服务提出了挑战。服务提供商中通常看不见该客户群中的女性,因为她们不愿透露自己的工作,因此可能会受到不适当的照顾。作为性工作者的妇女,无论是“在街上”还是“在街外”,由于工作本身而遭受社会排斥。性工作是一种污名化的活动,涉及许多非法方面,因此,在社区或服务提供商中被确定为性工作者,总是意味着面临敌对或歧视。性工作者可能因为害怕这种态度或普遍害怕与可能被视为“官方”的法定机构进行接触而不愿公开获得服务。由于其他因素,性工作者常常会遭受进一步的社会排斥,这些因素有时与商业性工作相关。这些因素可能是性工作的结果(例如,刑事定罪和罚款),或者是首先涉足该工作的原因(例如,贫困或非法吸毒)。无论原因和结果的途径如何,很明显,性工作者都不是社会的主流,这一地位被认为是对健康的内在损害。从一开始,艾滋病毒性工作者就以预防计划为目标。性工作者通常被认为是“感染源”,他们有可能将病毒传播到“主流”异性恋人群中。预防艾滋病毒的战略并非出于妇女自身的考虑而发展,而是出于她们被视为向男性顾客及其伴侣“传播媒介”的作用。从那以后,人们普遍认为,非判断性和赋权性的倡议比带有侮辱性和指责性的倡议更有用。

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