Ferguson Alyssa, Shannon Kate, Butler Jennifer, Goldenberg Shira M
Gender and Sexual Health Initiative, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, St. Paul's Hospital, 608-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6 Canada.
Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, St. Paul's Hospital, 608-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6 Canada.
Confl Health. 2017 Dec 4;11:25. doi: 10.1186/s13031-017-0124-y. eCollection 2017.
While the conditions in emergency humanitarian and conflict-affected settings often result in significant sex work economies, there is limited information on the social and structural conditions of sex work in these settings, and the impacts on HIV/STI prevention and access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services for sex workers. Our objective was to comprehensively review existing evidence on HIV/STI prevention and access to SRH services for sex workers in conflict-affected settings globally.
We conducted a comprehensive review of all peer review (both epidemiological and qualitative) and grey literature published in the last 15 years (2000-2015), focusing on 1) HIV/STI vulnerability or prevention, and/or 2) access to SRH services for sex workers in conflict-affected settings. Five databases were searched, using combinations of sex work, conflict/mobility, HIV/STI, and SRH service terms. Relevant peer-reviewed and grey literature were also hand-searched, and key papers were cross-referenced for additional material.
Five hundred fifty one records were screened and 416 records reviewed. Of 33 records describing HIV/STI prevention and/or access to SRH services among sex workers in conflict-affected settings, 24 were from sub-Saharan Africa; 18 studies described the results of primary research (13 quantitative, 3 qualitative, 2 mixed-methods) and 15 were non-primary research (e.g., commentaries, policy reports, programmatic manuals). Available evidence indicated that within conflict-affected settings, SWs' capacity to engage in HIV/STI prevention and access SRH services is severely undermined by social and structural determinants including widespread violence and human rights violations, the collapse of livelihoods and traditional social structures, high levels of displacement, and difficulties accessing already scant health services due to stigma, discrimination and criminalization.
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS: This review identified significant gaps in HIV/STI and SRH research, policy, and programming for conflict-affected sex workers, highlighting a critical gap in the humanitarian response. Sex worker-informed policies and interventions to promote HIV/STI prevention and access to HIV and SRH services using a rights-based approach are recommended, and further research on the degree to which conflict-affected sex workers are accessing HIV/STI and SRH services is recommended.A paradigm shift from the behavioural and biomedical approach to a human rights-based approach to HIV/STI prevention and SRH is strongly recommended.
虽然紧急人道主义和受冲突影响环境中的状况往往导致性交易经济规模庞大,但关于这些环境中性工作的社会和结构状况,以及对性工作者预防艾滋病毒/性传播感染和获得性健康和生殖健康(SRH)服务的影响的信息有限。我们的目标是全面审查全球受冲突影响环境中性工作者预防艾滋病毒/性传播感染和获得SRH服务的现有证据。
我们对过去15年(2000 - 2015年)发表的所有同行评审(包括流行病学和定性研究)及灰色文献进行了全面审查,重点关注1)艾滋病毒/性传播感染易感性或预防,和/或2)受冲突影响环境中性工作者获得SRH服务的情况。搜索了五个数据库,使用性工作、冲突/流动、艾滋病毒/性传播感染和SRH服务术语的组合。还对手头搜索了相关的同行评审和灰色文献,并对关键论文进行交叉引用以获取更多资料。
筛选了551条记录,审查了416条记录。在描述受冲突影响环境中性工作者预防艾滋病毒/性传播感染和/或获得SRH服务的33条记录中,24条来自撒哈拉以南非洲;18项研究描述了初步研究结果(13项定量研究、3项定性研究、2项混合方法研究),15项为非初步研究(如评论、政策报告、项目手册)。现有证据表明,在受冲突影响地区,性工作者预防艾滋病毒/性传播感染和获得SRH服务的能力受到社会和结构因素的严重破坏,这些因素包括广泛的暴力和侵犯人权行为、生计和传统社会结构的崩溃、大量人口流离失所,以及由于耻辱感、歧视和定罪而难以获得本就稀缺的医疗服务。
讨论/结论:本综述发现,针对受冲突影响的性工作者的艾滋病毒/性传播感染及SRH研究、政策和项目存在重大差距,凸显了人道主义应对中的一个关键空白。建议制定基于性工作者意见的政策和干预措施,以促进艾滋病毒/性传播感染预防并使性工作者能够基于权利途径获得艾滋病毒及SRH服务,并建议进一步研究受冲突影响的性工作者获得艾滋病毒/性传播感染及SRH服务的程度。强烈建议从行为和生物医学方法向基于人权的艾滋病毒/性传播感染预防及SRH方法转变。