2017
DOI: 10.1001/journalofethics.2017.19.1.pfor2-1701
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Who is in Your Waiting Room? Health Care Professionals as Culturally Responsive and Trauma-Informed First Responders to Human Trafficking

Abstract: Evidence-based practice standards are not yet well defined for assisting potential victims of human trafficking. Nonetheless, health care professionals are learning to be first responders in identifying, treating, and referring potential victims. As more public and private sector resources are used to train health care professionals about human trafficking, more evaluation and research are needed to develop an effective standard of care. Adopting a public health lens and using the "National Standards for Cultu… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“… Note . English (2017), Ernewein and Nieves (2015), Fraley and Aronowitz (2017), Gibbons and Stoklosa (2016), Goldberg et al (2017), Hornor (2015), Isaac et al (2011), Reid et al (2019), Rockinson-Szapkiw et al (2017), Rollins (2017), Varma et al (2015), and Washburn (2018). …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“… Note . English (2017), Ernewein and Nieves (2015), Fraley and Aronowitz (2017), Gibbons and Stoklosa (2016), Goldberg et al (2017), Hornor (2015), Isaac et al (2011), Reid et al (2019), Rockinson-Szapkiw et al (2017), Rollins (2017), Varma et al (2015), and Washburn (2018). …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The health care provider can act as a liaison between the trafficking survivor and the social services sector; however, the social service providers need to be ready to mobilize and provide shelter, meals, and rehabilitative services (Coughlin, Greenbaum, & Kitchen, 2020; Kennedy et al, 2021; Schwarz et al, 2016). At present, most facilities do not have programs and policies in place to facilitate this multidisciplinary approach (Rollins, 2017). In cases where these types of wraparound services are not available, working relationships should be established with local victim service agencies, law enforcement, and child protective services (Greenbaum, 2018).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Trafficking is also a crime that involves controlling and transporting people to be exploited through labor or sex for monetary gain (Cokar et al, 2016;Testa, 2020). Children who are engaged in prostitution are victims of trafficking even in the absence of coercion or fraud (Preble et al, 2019;Rollins et al, 2017). The United States federal law defines human trafficking as the recruitment, transportation, harboring, obtaining, or provision of an individual for labor or commercial sex act by fraud, force, or coercion (Chisolm-Straker et al, 2019;Testa, 2020).…”
Section: Definition Of Human Traffickingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eighty to ninety percent of trafficked victim have a history of sexual abuse during childhood(Hachey & Phillippi, 2017). Other groups that are more vulnerable to trafficking include children who (a) have been neglected, been a foster or runaway child, been a part of the juvenile justice system, disabled or undocumented people, migrant workers, poor individuals with low income; (b) people from the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer group; and (c) racial and ethnic minorities(Gibbons & Stoklosa, 2016;Moore, 2018;Rollins et al, 2017). Mental illness, domestic violence, substance misuse in the home, and family dysfunction are predisposing factors in the vulnerability to trafficking(Basu et al, 2021;Hachey & Phillippi, 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%