From 2010-2011, we conducted in-depth interviews with sex workers (n = 31) in Tijuana, Mexico who reported having previously experienced sexual exploitation or youth sex work. Participants recommended that interventions aim to:
- reduce susceptibility to sexual exploitation by providing social support and peer-based education;
- mitigate harms by improving access to HIV prevention resources and psychological support, and reducing gender-based violence; and
- provide opportunities to exit the sex industry via vocational supports and improved access to effective drug treatment.
Structural interventions incorporating these strategies are recommended to reduce susceptibility to sexual exploitation and enhance capacities to prevent HIV infection among marginalized women and girls in Mexico and across international settings.
Read more at: http://ht.ly/S746v
Via: Goldenberg SM1, Engstrom D, Rolon ML, Silverman JG, Strathdee SA.
- 1BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Division of AIDS, Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada ; Department of Medicine, Division of Global Public Health, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States of America.
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