The goal of this competing renewal is to study the impact of sex work law reform on mitigating or potentiating HIV/STI risks and access to HIV/STI-related care among female SWs. The Canadian government has recently introduced new legislation (Bill C-36) that will criminalize the purchase of sex (clients) and anyone who economically profits from prostitution (e.g., third parties, such brothel managers) while leaving the selling of sex as legal. This approach of criminalizing clients and third parties, but not SWs, often referred to as the Nordic model, has received increasing international attention over the last year, with similar laws/policies introduced in the EU, UK, and a growing number of US cities, despite a complete dearth of research on its intended and unintended impacts. Scientists, health professionals, and community have expressed strong concern that this law will escalate structural HIV/STI risks through heightened stigma and reduced social cohesion among SWs, displacement of SWs to hidden and unsafe venues to avoid police persecution, and increased rates and spatial clustering of violence and homicide. There is also increasing concern that police will use new means to harass and target SWs, including administrative laws (e.g., public nuisance, loitering), drug offenses, and court-mandated drug treatment for SWs who inject drugs (SW-PWIDs), which may further elevate sexual- and drug-related HIV/STI risks. Whether and how these new prostitution laws will affect structural HIV/STI risks and sexual- and drug-related harms for SWs will be important for international and US community and global policy. Through support from an R01, our team has assembled, recruited, and followed a large community-based cohort of street and off-street female SWs across Vancouver since 2005, known as the AESHA cohort (>90% retention). Vancouver is an ideal location for this research for several reasons: the imminent policy reform opportunity; site of one of the only longitudinal cohorts of SWs in North America; progressive harm reduction programs (e.g., supervised injection facilities) for SW- PWID; site of government-sponsored `seek, test, treat and retain' HIV efforts; and universal health coverage that allows us to link survey and biological data with administrative databases, permitting assessment of health care barriers free of the confounding effects of medical health insurance. Given the large number of countries, as well as US cities, contemplating legislative reform around sex work in the absence of empirical data, this study allows an unprecedented opportunity to evaluate a structural intervention of sex work law reform as a naturally-occurring experiment on HIV/STI risks and other health outcomes among SWs. The evaluation of structural interventions is rare and a high priority in the 2014 Trans-NIH Plan for HIV Research.

Public Health Relevance

Against increasing global calls from health and sex work organizations and evidence-based research suggesting that sex work should be decriminalized to protect women's health and safety, legislation that criminalizes the purchase of sex (clients) and other aspects of sex work has been introduced or proposed in a number of settings, including Canada. There is a dearth of evidence on health impacts of prostitution laws that criminalize clients and third parties. The goal of this competing renewal is to address this gap and study the impact of sex work law reform on mitigating or heightening HIV/STI risks and access to HIV/STI-related care among a longitudinal cohort of 800 HIV sero-negative female sex workers.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DA028648-07
Application #
9063116
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Hartsock, Peter
Project Start
2015-07-01
Project End
2020-03-30
Budget Start
2016-04-01
Budget End
2017-03-31
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of British Columbia
Department
Type
DUNS #
251949962
City
Vancouver
State
BC
Country
Canada
Zip Code
V6 1Z3
Barreto, Daniella; Shoveller, Jeannie; Braschel, Melissa et al. (2018) The Effect of Violence and Intersecting Structural Inequities on High Rates of Food Insecurity among Marginalized Sex Workers in a Canadian Setting. J Urban Health :
Prangnell, Amy; Shannon, Kate; Nosova, Ekaterina et al. (2018) Workplace violence among female sex workers who use drugs in Vancouver, Canada: does client-targeted policing increase safety? J Public Health Policy 39:86-99
Duff, Putu K; Money, Deborah M; Ogilvie, Gina S et al. (2018) Severe menopausal symptoms associated with reduced adherence to antiretroviral therapy among perimenopausal and menopausal women living with HIV in Metro Vancouver. Menopause 25:531-537
Goldenberg, Shira M; Krüsi, Andrea; Zhang, Emma et al. (2017) Structural Determinants of Health among Im/Migrants in the Indoor Sex Industry: Experiences of Workers and Managers/Owners in Metropolitan Vancouver. PLoS One 12:e0170642
Lyons, Tara; Krüsi, Andrea; Pierre, Leslie et al. (2017) Negotiating Violence in the Context of Transphobia and Criminalization: The Experiences of Trans Sex Workers in Vancouver, Canada. Qual Health Res 27:182-190
Argento, Elena; Strathdee, Steffanie A; Goldenberg, Shira et al. (2017) Violence, trauma and living with HIV: Longitudinal predictors of initiating crystal methamphetamine injection among sex workers. Drug Alcohol Depend 175:198-204
Boily, Marie-Claude; Shannon, Kate (2017) Criminal law, sex work, HIV: need for multi-level research. Lancet HIV 4:e98-e99
Barreto, Daniella; Shannon, Kate; Taylor, Chrissy et al. (2017) Food Insecurity Increases HIV Risk Among Young Sex Workers in Metro Vancouver, Canada. AIDS Behav 21:734-744
Muldoon, Katherine A; Akello, Monica; Muzaaya, Godfrey et al. (2017) Policing the epidemic: High burden of workplace violence among female sex workers in conflict-affected northern Uganda. Glob Public Health 12:84-97
Socías, M Eugenia; Duff, Putu; Shoveller, Jean et al. (2017) Use of injectable hormonal contraception and HSV-2 acquisition in a cohort of female sex workers in Vancouver, Canada. Sex Transm Infect 93:284-289

Showing the most recent 10 out of 67 publications