Your browser is unsupported

We recommend using the latest version of IE11, Edge, Chrome, Firefox or Safari.

UIC Nursing faculty publish report on how to improve healthcare access for sex workers

Singer_1090x595.jpg

Discrimination within healthcare settings limits sex workers' access to safe care Heading link

UIC College of Nursing researchers have recently published a paper demonstrating how patient-centered care for sex workers could be implemented.

UIC Nursing faculty members Randi Beth Singer, Natasha Crooks, Phoenix Matthews and Crystal Patil contributed to the report, “Feeling Safe, Feeling Seen, Feeling Free: Combating stigma and creating culturally safe care for sex workers in Chicago,” which was published in the journal PLOS ONE.

According to the paper’s authors, the project was designed to inform how communities may develop “empowerment interventions for sex workers by understanding their self-management, health promotion and harm reduction needs.”

Researchers conducted and analyzed in-depth interviews with sex workers in Chicago. Many participants reported they did not receive care that was respectful or culturally responsive. Barriers to care included stigmatizing and culturally unsafe experiences with healthcare providers, and the prohibitive cost of healthcare.

Interview participants reported developing strategies to identify sex worker-safe care providers, creating false self-narratives and health histories in order to safely access care, and creating self-care routines, such as yoga, meditation, that serve as alternatives to primary care.

“Our findings demonstrate how patient-centered care for sex-workers in Chicago might include holistic wellness exercises, accessible pay scales for services, and destigmatizing healthcare praxis,” the study stated.

The study also calls for a focus on culturally safe healthcare. For example, the study acknowledges that patients are experts in themselves, and providers must follow the lead of the patient rather than asking invasive, ignorantly curious, or unnecessary questions. The study states that “ongoing provider training and inbuilt, systemic responsivity to patient needs and contexts is crucial to patient-centered care.”