Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ingram School of Nursing, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Médecins Sans Frontières, Geneva, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2023 Aug 29;18(8):e0290067. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0290067. eCollection 2023.
While most individuals who have experienced sex trafficking will seek medical attention during their exploitation, very few will be identified by healthcare professionals (HCP). It constitutes a lost opportunity to provide appropriate support, resources, and services. In this study, we examined the experiences of accessing care of sex trafficking survivors in the Greater Montreal area and their interactions with HCPs to inform trafficking education programs for HCPs and allied health professionals regarding the needs of this patient population. We conducted seven semi-structured in-depth interviews with purposively selected sex trafficking survivors participating in "Les Survivantes," a program of the SPVM (Service de Police de la Ville de Montréal), designed to support trafficked individuals' exit journey. We used interpretive description to understand the lived experiences of trafficked individuals with direct applications to clinical education and care. Our results revealed that trafficked individuals accessing care present with a fragile trust in HCPs and how HCPs have many opportunities to conduct comprehensive examinations and query trafficking. Trafficked individuals' initial trust in HCPs can be strengthened by non-judgemental approaches or damaged by stigmatizing conduct, serving to isolate further and alienate this patient population. Health professionals' attitudes combined with healthcare settings' cultures of care (i.e., community vs emergency) and exposure to marginalized groups were key influencers of survivors' perception of healthcare interactions. The findings also emphasized the importance of routinely querying trafficking through sensitive psychosocial questioning based on observation of trafficking cues. Survivors reported a list of trafficking cues to recognize and emphasized the importance of trust as a condition of disclosure. Finally, survivors identified the need for exit planning to be centered around trafficked individuals' agency and holistic needs, and for streamlined community-based multidisciplinary collaboration to better serve this population. Our results highlight that most challenges experienced by trafficking survivors in accessing care and resources are modifiable through HCP education and training. Our study also provides new insights and concrete advice to improve care and support throughout the exiting process. We argue that healthcare services for this population be modeled harm reduction approaches that focus on victims' agency and needs, independent of their desire to exit trafficking. We emphasize the urgent need for proper case management and intersectoral and multidisciplinary care coordination in community-based settings as well as facilitated access to mental health support.
虽然大多数经历过性交易的人在被剥削期间都会寻求医疗,但很少有医疗保健专业人员(HCP)能够识别出他们。这是一个错失提供适当支持、资源和服务的机会。在这项研究中,我们研究了大蒙特利尔地区性交易幸存者获得医疗的经历,以及他们与 HCP 的互动,以便为 HCP 和相关健康专业人员提供有关该患者群体需求的性交易教育计划。我们对 7 名有目的地从“Les Survivantes”计划中选择的性交易幸存者进行了半结构化深入访谈,该计划是 SPVM(蒙特利尔市警察局)的一个项目,旨在支持被贩卖者的退出旅程。我们使用解释性描述来理解被贩卖者的生活经历,并直接应用于临床教育和护理。我们的研究结果表明,寻求医疗的被贩卖者对 HCP 的信任很脆弱,而 HCP 有很多机会进行全面检查和询问性交易。HCP 以非评判的方式对待被贩卖者,或者以污名化的行为对待他们,这都会进一步孤立和疏远这个患者群体,从而加强或破坏他们最初对 HCP 的信任。健康专业人员的态度以及医疗保健环境的关怀文化(即社区与急诊)和接触边缘化群体,是幸存者对医疗保健互动看法的关键影响因素。研究结果还强调了通过基于观察性交易线索的敏感社会心理询问,定期询问性交易的重要性。幸存者报告了一系列识别性交易的线索,并强调了信任是披露的条件的重要性。最后,幸存者确定了以被贩卖者的代理和整体需求为中心,以社区为基础的多学科合作,更好地为这一人群提供服务的退出计划的必要性。我们的研究结果表明,大多数被贩卖者在获得医疗和资源方面面临的挑战可以通过 HCP 的教育和培训来解决。我们的研究还为改善整个退出过程中的护理和支持提供了新的见解和具体建议。我们认为,应该采用以受害者的代理和需求为中心的减少伤害方法来为这一人群提供医疗服务,而不受他们退出性交易的愿望的影响。我们强调了在社区环境中,需要适当的病例管理以及部门间和多学科的护理协调,以及方便获得心理健康支持的紧急需求。