Abstract

Abstract In Hong Kong, it was estimated that there were at least 200,000 female sex workers (FSWs) in 2002; the total female population involved as workers, supporting staff and partners of the male clients exceeded half a million in a city of 6.8 million people. This study sought to examine the occupational health concerns for mainland Chinese immigrant FSWs in Hong Kong. A total sample of 83 street workers was surveyed and a focus group of six women was held. The mean age of the women interviewed was 35 years. Sixty-eight women (82.23%) had been in Hong Kong for less than one year of whom 42.4% had been in Hong Kong for less than three months. The women often tended to work for long hours even when they got sick. Most of their income was sent back to China to support families. The streets posed a dangerous environment with risk of insults, police checks as well as abuse and robbery from clients. Fundamentally, poverty and the big gap in wealth between Hong Kong and China were the factors that had driven...

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