Jeal Nikki, Macleod John, Salisbury Chris, Turner Katrina
Centre for Academic Primary Care School of Social & Community Medicine Bristol, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
The National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care West (NIHR CLAHRC West) University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK.
BMJ Open. 2017 Mar 22;7(3):e013018. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-013018.
To explore street sex workers (SSWs) views and experiences of drug treatment, in order to understand why this population tend to experience poor drug treatment outcomes.
In-depth interviews.
Bristol, UK.
24 current and exited SSWs with current or previous experience of problematic use of heroin and/or crack cocaine.
Participants described how feeling unable to discuss their sex work in drug treatment groups undermined their engagement in the treatment process. They outlined how disclosure of sex work resulted in stigma from male and female service users as well as adverse interactions with male service users. Participants highlighted that non-disclosure meant they could not discuss unresolved trauma issues which were common and which emerged or increased when they reduced their drug use. As trauma experiences had usually involved men as perpetrators participants said it was not appropriate to discuss them in mixed treatment groups. SSWs in recovery described how persistent trauma-related symptoms still affected their lives many years after stopping sex work and drug use. Participants suggested SSW-only services and female staff as essential to effective care and highlighted that recent service changes were resulting in loss of trusted staff and SSW-only treatment services. This was reported to be reducing the likelihood of SSWs engaging in drug services, with the resultant loss of continuity of care and reduced time with staff acting as barriers to an effective therapeutic relationship.
SSWs face many barriers to effective drug treatment. SSW-only treatment groups, continuity of care with treatment staff and contact with female staff, particularly individuals who have had similar lived experience, could improve the extent to which SSWs engage and benefit from drug treatment services. Service engagement and outcomes may also be improved by drug services that include identification and treatment of trauma-related symptoms.
探讨街头性工作者对药物治疗的看法和经历,以了解为何这一群体的药物治疗效果往往不佳。
深度访谈。
英国布里斯托尔。
24名目前仍在从事或已退出街头性工作的女性,她们目前或曾经有海洛因和/或快克可卡因使用问题。
参与者描述了在药物治疗小组中无法谈论自己的性工作如何削弱了她们对治疗过程的参与度。她们概述了透露性工作如何导致男性和女性服务使用者的污名化,以及与男性服务使用者的不良互动。参与者强调,不透露意味着她们无法讨论未解决的创伤问题,这些问题很常见,而且在减少药物使用时会出现或加剧。由于创伤经历通常涉及男性作为施害者,参与者表示在混合治疗小组中讨论这些问题不合适。处于康复期的街头性工作者描述了与创伤相关的持续症状在停止性工作和药物使用多年后仍如何影响她们的生活。参与者建议专为街头性工作者提供的服务以及女性工作人员对有效护理至关重要,并强调最近的服务变化导致失去了受信任的工作人员和专为街头性工作者提供的治疗服务。据报道,这降低了街头性工作者参与药物服务的可能性,随之而来的护理连续性丧失以及与工作人员相处时间减少成为建立有效治疗关系的障碍。
街头性工作者在获得有效的药物治疗方面面临许多障碍。专为街头性工作者设立的治疗小组、与治疗工作人员的护理连续性以及与女性工作人员(特别是有类似生活经历的人)的接触,可以提高街头性工作者参与药物治疗服务并从中受益的程度。识别和治疗与创伤相关症状的药物服务也可能改善服务参与度和治疗效果。