Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Int J Drug Policy. 2017 Dec;50:74-81. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2017.09.002. Epub 2017 Oct 16.
Women who grow up in economic scarcity often face limited opportunities for upward mobility, as a result of challenges securing stable housing, quality education, and steady employment. Chronic instability may limit the capacity of women to protect themselves against HIV/STI-related harm when engaging in sexual activity or drug use. Characterizing the structural contexts that facilitate HIV/STI risk among women are critical to effective design and implementation of drug and sexual harm reduction interventions.
Semi-structured in-depth interviews were completed with 25 female exotic dancers working in Baltimore City and County exotic dance clubs July 2014-May 2015. Using thematic analysis, interviews were examined to understand the nature of structural vulnerability experienced by dancers during their early lives through the initial months of exotic dancing, including an examination of the roles of drug use and social relationships in engagement of sexual risk behavior.
Dancers depicted early experiences of social and economic disadvantage, which accumulated through early adulthood. Substance use emerged as an important subject for the majority of women, operating cyclically as both precursor to and product of accumulating social and economic hardship. Dancers revealed social strategies that buffered the effects of structural vulnerability and minimized exposure to workplace-related drug and sexual harms.
This study provides insight on an understudied group of at-risk women with a unique demographic profile. Findings illustrate how the effects of structural vulnerability, substance abuse, social strategies, and opportunities for economic gain through sexual services in the workplace converge to produce varying levels of HIV/STI risk among exotic dancers.
在经济匮乏中成长的女性往往面临着向上流动的机会有限,因为她们在获得稳定的住房、优质教育和稳定就业方面面临挑战。慢性不稳定可能限制女性在从事性活动或吸毒时保护自己免受艾滋病毒/性传播感染相关伤害的能力。描述促进女性艾滋病毒/性传播感染风险的结构背景对于有效设计和实施药物和性伤害减少干预措施至关重要。
2014 年 7 月至 2015 年 5 月,对巴尔的摩市和县的 25 名从事高级舞娘工作的女性进行了半结构化深入访谈。使用主题分析,对访谈进行了检查,以了解舞者在早期生活和最初几个月的高级舞娘工作中经历的结构脆弱性的性质,包括检查药物使用和社会关系在参与性风险行为中的作用。
舞者描绘了她们在早期生活和最初几个月的高级舞娘工作中经历的社会和经济劣势,这些劣势在成年早期积累。大多数女性都出现了药物使用问题,这是一个重要的话题,药物使用既是社会和经济困难积累的前兆,也是其结果。舞者揭示了缓冲结构脆弱性影响并最小化工作场所相关药物和性伤害暴露的社会策略。
这项研究提供了对一个风险较高的女性群体的深入了解,这些女性具有独特的人口统计特征。研究结果说明了结构脆弱性、药物滥用、社会策略以及通过性服务在工作场所获得经济利益的机会如何相互作用,导致高级舞娘的艾滋病毒/性传播感染风险程度不同。