Friday, January 8, 2016

The Illusions and Juxtapositions of Commercial Sexual Exploitation among Youth: Identifying Effective Street-Outreach Strategies

To explore sexually exploited youths’ perspectives of how street outreach workers can effectively provide outreach and connections to services, we conducted qualitative interviews with 13 female participants, ages 14–22, in a Midwestern U.S. city. Participants reported multiple types of exploitation, most first exploited by age 13, plus substance use, and recurrent homelessness. Nearly all had a pimp, and all used the internet as a venue for sexual exploitation. Participants wanted outreach workers to use “soft words” to refer to exploitation. They expressed contradictory images of their “boyfriend” pimps and their exploitation. They wanted outreach workers to “provide resources,” “be non-judgmental,” ”listen,” and “care.” Street outreach can be one way to support sexually exploited youth, but should occur in multiple settings.

Four main themes described the experiences of exploitation and service needs of these sexually exploited girls. Pathways into prostitution started early, often by age 13 and included past history of family violence and running away. The juxtapositions and illusions of “sex work” revealed the coercion and control behind the rationalization of pimps as “boyfriends” and exploitation as lucrative “sex work.” Despite these illusionary positive perspectives, nearly all the participants had been homeless, were coerced into using alcohol and drugs to cope with their exploitation, and had been seriously assaulted by pimps or others. Regardless of orientation, they were pressured into sexual acts with either gender. These young women reported multiple, diverse venues as locations of exploitation, including social networking sites on the internet. Because of the pervasive stigma of sexual exploitation, the participants wanted “soft words” from street outreach workers, by which they meant both euphemistic terms for exploitation as well as respectful, non-judgmental and caring interactions with street outreach workers.

Many of our findings were mirrored in other qualitative studies with women involved in prostitution (). In most cases, it seemed as though the participants involved in our study used the illusion they were earning money through “sex work” to mask the painful truth that they were being exploited, because they felt they had no other choices. This illusion, that being exploited can bring opportunities many girls on the streets do not have--money, a place to live, food and love from a “boyfriend”/pimp--may make it difficult for them to escape exploitation.

Street outreach is a type of intervention that is rooted in harm reduction and “meeting people where they are,” which is why it may be a successful method of identifying, approaching and engaging with sexually exploited girls and young women. In street outreach approaches, they may feel a greater sense of control, because the approach and interaction is taking place on their “turf.” Street outreach workers are often some of the first people that sexually exploited young women may ask for help, and need to listen carefully for the subtle disclosures and requests. If an outreach worker or service provider does not recognize that exploited young women may use other “soft words” to describe their involvement in the sex trade, they may miss this completely, and not be able to provide the appropriate approach and support.

As with other research () the settings where exploitation occurred varied widely, from street to strip club to the internet. Street-outreach efforts to locate youth and provide supplies, linkage to shelters and community services, are primarily limited to the street and not these other venues. Outreach workers may need to consider novel venues and internet outreach as strategies for connecting with sexually exploited young women.

There were many potential lost opportunities for these young women to have received help, in the foster care system, mental health system, and juvenile detention, yet none of these systems seemed able to offer a clear path for preventing exploitation or helping teens exit ongoing exploitation or homelessness. The participants also did not identify these systems as places that provided them sensitive, personalized care or targeted services meeting their individualized needs. A public health nursing model using advanced practice nurses working directly with street outreach workers might be an additional useful approach, helping to connect teens to health care, social services, and housing ().

While it may seem counterintuitive to help sexually exploited girls and young women by providing supplies that may allow them to continue being exploited, meeting their identified needs is an important means of establishing trust. Such nonjudgmental care may encourage them to seek out street outreach workers again for referrals to other services. This can be likened to the “pre-contemplation stage” in , which was adapted from the transtheoretical stages of change theory. In the earliest “pre-contemplation” stage, outreach workers connect with youth who may not be considering leaving situations where they are exploited. During this time, providers can assist with meeting their immediate needs, providing health education, and engaging them in safety planning.

Full article at:   http://goo.gl/WP1VMp

Beth Holger-Ambrose, Minnesota Department of Human Services, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA;
Address correspondence to: Beth Holger-Ambrose, Minnesota Department of Human Services, Office of Economic Opportunity, 444 Lafayette Rd., St. Paul, MN 55155. Email: su.nm.etats@esorbma-regloh.hteb
Beth Holger-Ambrose, MA, is the homeless youth services coordinator at the Minnesota Department of Human Services in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Cheree Langmade, BSN, RN, is a doctor of nursing practice student at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.
Laurel D. Edinburgh, MSN, PNP, is a nurse practitioner at the Midwest Children’s Resource Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, and is a cofounder of the Runaway Intervention Program in St. Paul.
Elizabeth Saewyc, PhD, RN, FSAHM, is a professor in nursing and adolescent medicine and founding director of the Stigma and Resilience Among Vulnerable Youth Centre at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. She holds one of Canada’s 15 national applied public health research chairs, hers focused on adolescent health.





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