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LeftyMom

(49,212 posts)
Sat Aug 16, 2014, 02:49 PM Aug 2014

RH Reality Check: The Evidence Is In: Decriminalizing Sex Work Is Critical to Public Health

http://rhrealitycheck.org/article/2014/08/13/evidence-decriminalizing-sex-work-critical-public-health/

The Lancet series authors join many other prominent public health voices in identifying the decriminalization of sex work as vital to preventing the spread of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). For two decades, sex workers rights’ activists throughout the world have pushed human rights, public health, and HIV and AIDS response leaders to recognize that they, along with people who inject drugs and men who have sex with men, are “key populations” without whom an effective HIV and AIDS response is impossible. In 2012, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared that “all countries should work toward decriminalization of sex work and elimination of the unjust application of non-criminal laws and regulations against sex workers.” In South Africa (with the largest population of people living with HIV in the world), the National AIDS Council is urging its government to decriminalize sex work—a demand that advocates and health policy professionals are making in dozens of other countries as well. Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the UN’s Global Commission on HIV and the Law all endorse this position. The latter points out “the impossibility of governments stigmatizing people on one hand, while simultaneously actually helping to reduce their risk of HIV transmission or exposure on the other.”

Sex work has been decriminalized in New Zealand and one province (New South Wales) in Australia leaving sex work businesses subject to standard occupational health and safety regulations. Law enforcement treats the sale of sex as it does any other business, without any intrusion or interruption unless existing laws are being violated.

Decriminalization has resulted in higher rates of condom use and enables sex workers to organize community-based health practices that demonstrably improve health and reduce HIV risk. It also makes it possible for sex workers to report and for the police to address illegal acts as they occur, such as assault, theft of services, employment of minors, or client coercion. In this decriminalized setting, sex workers can be strong allies in the fight against trafficking, intimate partner violence, and child abuse since they can report incidents to the police and social service agencies without putting themselves at risk of arrest.
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RH Reality Check: The Evidence Is In: Decriminalizing Sex Work Is Critical to Public Health (Original Post) LeftyMom Aug 2014 OP
From a public health perspective it makes sense. n/t Gormy Cuss Aug 2014 #1
Facts, evidence and peer reviewed research have ways of blowing up people's ideological agendas bluestateguy Aug 2014 #2

bluestateguy

(44,173 posts)
2. Facts, evidence and peer reviewed research have ways of blowing up people's ideological agendas
Sat Aug 16, 2014, 05:18 PM
Aug 2014

And their response is usually just to whine and pound the table.

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