Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.

Although trafficked women and adolescents are at risk of unprotected or forced sex, there is little research on maternity care among trafficking survivors. We explored health care needs, service use and challenges among women who became pregnant while in the trafficking situation in the United Kingd...

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Main Authors: Debra Bick, Louise M Howard, Sian Oram, Cathy Zimmerman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5699814?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ad951d4f427e4ce89af2c60d7c8c6b912020-11-25T01:58:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011211e018785610.1371/journal.pone.0187856Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.Debra BickLouise M HowardSian OramCathy ZimmermanAlthough trafficked women and adolescents are at risk of unprotected or forced sex, there is little research on maternity care among trafficking survivors. We explored health care needs, service use and challenges among women who became pregnant while in the trafficking situation in the United Kingdom (UK) and clinicians' perspectives of maternity care for trafficked persons.Cross-sectional survey and qualitative interviews with trafficking survivors recruited from statutory and voluntary sector organisations in England and qualitative interviews with maternity clinicians and family doctors undertaken to offer further insight into experiences reported by these women.Twenty-eight (29%) of 98 women who took part in a large study of trafficking survivors reported one or more pregnancies while trafficked, whose data are reported here. Twelve (42.8%) of these women reported at least one termination of pregnancy while in the trafficking situation and 25 (89.3%) experienced some form of mental health disorder. Nineteen (67.9%) women experienced pre-trafficking physical abuse and 9 (32.%) sexual abuse. A quarter of women were trafficked for sexual exploitation, six for domestic servitude and two for manual labour. Survivors and clinicians described service challenges, including restrictions placed on women's movements by traffickers, poor knowledge on how to access maternity care, poor understanding of healthcare entitlements and concerns about confidentiality. Maternity care clinicians recognised potential indicators of trafficking, but considered training would help them identify and respond to victims. Main limitations include that findings reflect women who had exited the trafficking situation, however as some had only recently exited the trafficking situation, difficulties with recall were likely to be low.More than one in four women became pregnant while trafficked, indicating that maternity services offer an important contact point for identification and care. Given the prevalence of sexual exploitation and abuse among trafficking survivors, clinicians should ensure antenatal care and screening for sexually transmitted infections can be readily accessed by women. Clinicians require specialised training alongside designated pathways and protocols with clear referral options to ensure confidential maternity care tailored to each woman's needs.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5699814?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Debra Bick
Louise M Howard
Sian Oram
Cathy Zimmerman
spellingShingle Debra Bick
Louise M Howard
Sian Oram
Cathy Zimmerman
Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Debra Bick
Louise M Howard
Sian Oram
Cathy Zimmerman
author_sort Debra Bick
title Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.
title_short Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.
title_full Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.
title_fullStr Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.
title_full_unstemmed Maternity care for trafficked women: Survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the United Kingdom's National Health Service.
title_sort maternity care for trafficked women: survivor experiences and clinicians' perspectives in the united kingdom's national health service.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Although trafficked women and adolescents are at risk of unprotected or forced sex, there is little research on maternity care among trafficking survivors. We explored health care needs, service use and challenges among women who became pregnant while in the trafficking situation in the United Kingdom (UK) and clinicians' perspectives of maternity care for trafficked persons.Cross-sectional survey and qualitative interviews with trafficking survivors recruited from statutory and voluntary sector organisations in England and qualitative interviews with maternity clinicians and family doctors undertaken to offer further insight into experiences reported by these women.Twenty-eight (29%) of 98 women who took part in a large study of trafficking survivors reported one or more pregnancies while trafficked, whose data are reported here. Twelve (42.8%) of these women reported at least one termination of pregnancy while in the trafficking situation and 25 (89.3%) experienced some form of mental health disorder. Nineteen (67.9%) women experienced pre-trafficking physical abuse and 9 (32.%) sexual abuse. A quarter of women were trafficked for sexual exploitation, six for domestic servitude and two for manual labour. Survivors and clinicians described service challenges, including restrictions placed on women's movements by traffickers, poor knowledge on how to access maternity care, poor understanding of healthcare entitlements and concerns about confidentiality. Maternity care clinicians recognised potential indicators of trafficking, but considered training would help them identify and respond to victims. Main limitations include that findings reflect women who had exited the trafficking situation, however as some had only recently exited the trafficking situation, difficulties with recall were likely to be low.More than one in four women became pregnant while trafficked, indicating that maternity services offer an important contact point for identification and care. Given the prevalence of sexual exploitation and abuse among trafficking survivors, clinicians should ensure antenatal care and screening for sexually transmitted infections can be readily accessed by women. Clinicians require specialised training alongside designated pathways and protocols with clear referral options to ensure confidential maternity care tailored to each woman's needs.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5699814?pdf=render
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