Abstract

The commercial sexual exploitation of children in the U.S. is an under-recognized yet prevalent issue. An increasing number of Asian-American adolescents, particularly of Southeast Asian descent, are at risk for commercial sexual exploitation due to a myriad of factors. These factors include poverty and intergenerational conflicts as adolescents attempt to adjust to a U.S. lifestyle and culture vastly different from that of their parents. The issues of commercially sexually exploited children (CSEC) first emerged at Asian Health Services (AHS), a community health center in Oakland, California, in 2001. AHS Youth Program staff and providers noticed that several Southeast Asian adolescent patients were seeking care for repeated symptoms of sexually transmitted diseases, reporting multiple sexual partners, disclosing chronic truancy issues, revealing a history of sexual abuse, and exhibited other high risk factors for sexual exploitation. Patients eventually disclosed their coercion into the sex trade and shared concerns for their health and safety. In 2006, AHS and its community partner Banteay Srei co-developed the first primary care clinical screening tool in a federally qualified health center (FQHC). This paper discusses the need for and development process of the screening tool. The process included gathering perspectives of CSEC patients to ensure the tool was grounded in lived experiences of the affected population, and also incorporated insight from healthcare providers and staff to ensure practical implementation by health practitioners. The paper provides recommendations to raise awareness among community members, healthcare professionals, and policy makers in order to curtail the rising CSEC epidemic, and to address the needs of patients who have been commercially sexually exploited.

Full Text
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