Janssen Patricia A, Gibson Kate, Bowen Raven, Spittal Patricia M, Petersen Karen L
UBC School of Population and Public Health, 5804 Fairview Avenue, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
J Urban Health. 2009 Sep;86(5):804-9. doi: 10.1007/s11524-009-9376-1. Epub 2009 Jun 17.
Women in the sex trade whose economic and social base are urban streets face multiple dangers of predation, isolation, and illness. A Mobile Access Project (MAP) to provide emergency medical help, peer counseling, condoms and clean needles, resource information and referral, and a place of respite and safety was initiated for sex trade workers in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. We conducted surveys with 100 women sex workers who accessed MAP services and reviewed MAP logbooks to document use of services. We assessed the impact of MAP through review of data from a concurrent cohort study of injection drug users and a survey of 97 women at a drop-in center in the Downtown Eastside. Over 90% of MAP clients reported that the van made them feel safer on the street. Sixteen percent of surveyed MAP clients recalled a specific incident in which the van's presence protected them from a physical assault and 10% recalled an incident when its presence had prevented a sexual assault. Distribution of needles and condoms has increased steadily since the implementation of MAP. Eighty percent of women surveyed at a drop-in center in the Downtown Eastside had received services from MAP. The peer-led Mobile Access Project has emerged as a viable harm reduction strategy for serving the immediate health and trauma-related needs of women engaged in street-level sex work.
以城市街道为经济和社会基础的性交易女性面临着被捕食、孤立和患病的多重危险。在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省温哥华,为性交易工作者启动了一个移动救助项目(MAP),提供紧急医疗救助、同伴咨询、避孕套和干净针头、资源信息及转介服务,以及一个可暂避和获得安全保障的场所。我们对100名使用MAP服务的女性性工作者进行了调查,并查阅了MAP日志以记录服务使用情况。我们通过回顾来自一项针对注射吸毒者的同期队列研究的数据以及对市中心东区一个救助中心的97名女性进行的调查,评估了MAP的影响。超过90%的MAP服务对象表示,这辆救助车让她们在街上感觉更安全。在接受调查的MAP服务对象中,16%回忆起有具体事件表明救助车的出现使她们免受身体攻击,10%回忆起有事件表明救助车的出现防止了性侵犯。自MAP实施以来,针头和避孕套的发放量稳步增加。在市中心东区一个救助中心接受调查的女性中,80%曾接受过MAP的服务。由同伴主导的移动救助项目已成为一种可行的减少伤害策略,可满足从事街头性工作女性的即时健康及与创伤相关的需求。