"It Is Important for Everyone as Humans to Feel Important, ?" Findings from a Community-Based Participatory Needs Assessment with Street-level Sex Workers.
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ID: 100466
2020
A community-based participatory research design informed the development and conduct of a needs assessment with street-level sex workers within a mid-sized city in Ontario, Canada. The research question was: What would help street-level sex workers to live with enhanced safety and dignity within their community? Twenty-four women who accessed a peer-driven drop-in center (SafeSpace) participated in in-depth interviews. Observational data of items requested by women who accessed SafeSpace were also documented over a 6-month time period. The overarching theme of relationships was identified as vital to participants' ability to live and work with enhanced safety and dignity in their community. Subthemes included: : Relationships to public space(s); : Relationships with/in community services; and : Relationships in a peer-driven drop-in center for/with/by sex workers. Our findings demonstrate how central relationships are, particularly peer, to enhancing or diminishing sex workers' sense of dignity, self-worth, safety, and enhanced their access to services.
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hall2020itsocial
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Authors | Hall, Jodi;Donelle, Lorie;Laliberte Rudman, Debbie;Baumann, Julie;Weaver, Holly;Jones, Rosalie;Moulton-Sauve, Magdalen;Jenkins, Karen;Trudell, Annalise; |
Journal | social work in public health |
Year | 2020 |
DOI | 10.1080/19371918.2020.1733163 |
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