Monday, February 7, 2011

AJN The American Journal of Nursing: The Role of the Nurse in Combating Human Trafficking

AJN, American Journal of Nursing. 111(2):28-37, February 2011.

doi: 10.1097/01.NAJ.0000394289.55577.b6

Trafficked victims access health services, yet most providers don't recognize the signs that someone is being trafficked. Learn how to safely intervene.


EPUB
PDF (5.46 MB)
Abstract
Abstract:

Overview: Human trafficking, also called modern slavery, happens worldwide—and the United States is no exception. Within our borders, thousands of foreign nationals and U.S. citizens, many of them children, are forced or coerced into sex work or various forms of labor every year. Nurses and other health care providers who encounter victims of trafficking often don't realize it, and opportunities to intervene are lost. Although no one sign can demonstrate with certainty when someone is being trafficked, there are several indicators that clinicians should know. This article provides an overview of human trafficking, describes how to recognize signs that a person is being trafficked and how to safely intervene, and offers an extensive resource list.

Keywords: debt bondage, human trafficking, labor trafficking, modern slavery, sex trafficking, trafficking in persons

Go to Full Text of this Article


AJN The American Journal of Nursing
Enhanced by Zemanta

No comments:

Post a Comment