Title: TRAFFICKING IN WOMEN
1TRAFFICKING IN WOMEN
Hande Yagcan, Nursing, Turkey Katrien Bruneel,
Occupational Therapy, Belgium Sherlylynn Laban,
Nursing, Denmark Stine Thomsen, Occupational
Therapy, Denmark Kirsten Andersen, Midwifery,
Denmark Hanne Lorimer Aamodt, Nursing, Norway
2(No Transcript)
3- 'Trafficking in persons' shall mean the
recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring
or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or
use of force or other forms of coercion, of
abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse
of power or of a position of vulnerability or of
the giving or receiving of payments or benefits
to achieve the consent of a person having control
over another person, for the purpose of
exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a
minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of
others or other forms of sexual exploitation,
forced labour or services, slavery or practices
similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of
organs (Article 3,UN Protocol to Prevent,
Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons,
especially Women and Children, supplementing the
United Nations Convention Against Transnational
Organized Crime)
4Fact Sheet
12.3 million people working as slaves at any
given time 4 million people are victims of
trafficking every year 3.2 within national
borders 800.000 over international
borders 500.000 people are traded into Europe
per year
580 are women and underaged girls 80 of these
are traded for prostitution purposes 3. most
money making form of organized crime passed
only by trade in weapons and drugs. annual
profit of 1 billion euro Source
www.kvindehandel.dk
6Trafficking and Poverty
- Main causes. Why does trafficking exist?
- Demand growing market
- Supply economical and social inequality
- also
- prostitution is legal
- forced prostitution by western husbands
- Poverty ? Trafficking
7Health Problems of Trafficking Women
Psychlogical Health Problems
Physical Health Problems
8Psychological Health Problems
9Psychlogical Health Problems
- Anxiety disorders
- Traumatic stress disorders
- Fear-fobia
- Mood disorders
- Depression
- Sleeping disturbance-disorders
- Eating disturbance-disorders
- Drug or alcohol abuse
-
-
10Traumatic Stress Disorders
- Severe traumatic event
- Avoiding any thoughts
- Can not recall important details
- Feelings of no real future
- Flashbacks, hallucinations, illusions
- Sleeping Problems
- Irritability or outbursts of anger
- Concentrating problems.
- Source DSM IV(Diagnostical and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disease) -
11Depression
- Loss of interest in daily activities
-
- Significant weight loss or gain
- Insomnia or hypersomnia
-
- Psychomotoric agitation or retardation
- Risk of committing suicide
- Source DSM IV (Diagnostical and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disease)
12Physical Health Problems
13Sexually transmitted diseases (STD)
- group of contagious conditions whose principal
mode of transmission is by intimate sexual
activity
14Sexually transmitted diseases(STD)
- Bacterial infections
- - Syphilis
- - Gonorrhoea
- - Chlamydial infection
- - Organisms associated with bacterial
vaginosis - Viral infections
- - Genital herpes
- - Genital warts
- Protozoal infections
- - Trichomoniasis
- Fungal infections
- - Vaginal candidosis
- Ectoparasites
- - Scabies
- - Pubic lice
- Others eg. HIV, Hepatitis A B
-
15Chlamydial infection
- Infect mucosal areas with resulting submucosal
inflammation and marked neutrophil responses - Coexistion with gonnorhea
- Treatment antibiotics
16Hepatitis
- 400-5OO million people
- He patitis BVirus a developped DNA virus
- Virus found in body fluids
- HAV
- -spread from the stool to the mounth
- - symptoms poor appetite, feeling ill,
nausea, fever - HBV
- - spread through contaminated blood
- - symptoms joint pains , wheals( itchy red
hives on the skin), dark urine - HCV
17Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
- Symptoms
- fever, swollen, lymph nodes and general
discomfort 3-14 days. - symptoms disappear, lymphs may stay enlarged,
may have no other symptoms for years
18What is being done to prevent Trafficking?
19UN on trafficking
- The Global programme against trafficking was
launched by UN,UNODC, and UNICRI - GPAT assist in covering the organized crime
groups in human trafficking and promotes other
effective ways to track down these prepetrators.
20GPAT
- At national level the program aims
- - promote public awareness campaign
- - train lawenforcement, judges and
procecuters - - advise in revising and drafting relevant
legislation - - strenghten victim and witness support
- At international level the program aims
- - provide assistance to agencies, institutions
and governments as part of an interdisciplinary
effort to design effective measures against
trafficking in human beings
21The most important bills launched by the EU
- Since 1996 the EU has had a common strategy as a
countermeasure against human trafficking
22The strategy is based on three main principles
- Prevention of illegal acts of human trafficking
- Providing protection and support to the victims
- Prosecution of the perpetrators
23Reden Stop Kvindehandel
- 2006 Report on human trafficking
- Why the phenomenon exist?
24What can we do?
- Legalization
- Criminalization
25Conclusion
- There is no evidence to prove that legalization
of prostitution reduces the number of traded
women - On the other hand, it is indicated that the main
effect of legalized prostitution is an increase
in the demand for prostitutes, and a subsequent
increase of human trafficking
26How Reden thinks that human Trafficking can be
stopped
- Ban on buying sexual services
- - Signal non-acceptance
- The high profit / low risk for perpetrators must
be changed - Establish more social initiatives in the
countries of origin - Enhance international cooperation between police
and social organizations -
27- Our professions in context
28Midwives
The Patient a traded woman
Occupational Therapists
Nurses
Other health care personnel
29Professions
- Multidisiplinary activities
- Harm reduction
- Empowerment
- Wellbeing programs
- Job rehabilitation
- Medical treatment
30What to do about STD?
- Accurate diagnosis
- Effective treatment
- Finish treatment before resumption of sexual
activity - Partner notification to prevent further
transmission - Counseling on safe sexual practices
- The exhibition of a confidential, friendly, well
advertised and accessible environment for patient
care
31What to do about the mental suffering?
- Show empathy
- Create an atmosphere of respect and trust
- Encourage the women to take an active part in the
rehabilitation - Humour and spontaneity create a relaxed and
lively atmosphere- when the situation allows it - An open dialogue
- An interpreter facilitates this communication and
acts as a cultural mediator
32Discussion
- What do you think will help the women traded?
Legalization, criminalization. - Who makes the market? What can one do about this?