AIDS conference told legalizing prostitution a simple way to curb HIV - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:31 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Health

AIDS conference told legalizing prostitution a simple way to curb HIV

The massive International AIDS Conference in Melbourne this week is being reminded of research showing that one of the easiest ways to curtail HIV transmission is to decriminalize prostitution, which makes sex-trade workers better able to protect themselves and seek treatment.

Marginalizing sex workers makes them less able to enforce condom use or seek treatment, advocate says

United Nations-backed research suggests that criminalizing any aspect of prostitution puts workers in the sex trade at greater risk of contracting or spreading HIV, delegates at the International AIDS Conference in Melbourne have heard. (Shutterstock)

As HIV scientists, advocates and patients gather at the International AIDS Conference in Melbourne this week, there is an increasing focus on the role that the criminalization of sex work is playing in the worldwide epidemic.

Experts say laws that prohibit prostitution are hampering efforts to control the global HIV epidemic.

During the opening session of the conference, the executive director of the joint United Nations program on HIV/AIDS, Michel Sidib, chided governments for criminalizing sex work.

"We cannot run away from the harm caused by criminalizing populations," Sidib said. "We must implement the recommendations of the Global Commission on HIV and the Law."

Where criminal laws have actually been removed, rates of HIV and sexually transmitted infection are very, very low- Sandra Ka Hon Chu, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

That UN-convened commission found that making any part of prostitution illegal, whether it be the buying or selling of sex, makesworkers less able to protect themselves from infections orseektreatment if they become infected.

It's a conclusion supported by a large body of research evidence, including now a series of seven papers on HIV and sex workers published this week by the medical journal Lancet.

UNAIDS executive director Michel Sidib reminded the AIDS Conference of a UN commission's findings on the effects of criminalizing prostitution on HIV infections. (Graham Denholm/Getty)

One of the articles analyzed published studies on HIV rates among sex workers, condom use and other data from three cities in India,Kenya andVancouver.

Author Steffanie Strathdee of the University of California, San Diego said it's clear sexual violence against female prostitutesand the criminalization of their workmakethem less likely to use condoms.

Eliminating sexual violence would avert an estimated 17 per cent of infections in Kenya and 20 per cent in Canada by creating safer working conditions in which sex workers could demand clients use condoms, she said.

But her team showed that decriminalizing sex work would have a far bigger impact in reducing transmission.

"We've shown that up to 46 per cent of incident HIV infections could be averted in any of the three cities we examined by just fully decriminalizing prostitution," she said.

Riskier sex

Sandra Ka Hon Chu is co-director of research and advocacy with the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network in Toronto, which opposes Canada's proposed new prostitution legislation. The bill before Parliament would make it illegal to buy sex, and is expected to receive third reading in the Commons this fall.

Chu is among more than 220 legal specialists and advocates who've written an open letter to the prime minister to reconsider the bill. She said its effect will be to create the conditions that lead to riskier sex and more HIV infections.

"When you're driven to isolated areas because of policing, because your clients are being arrested, it's harder for you to negotiate condom use, harder for you to insist on safer sex or even discuss what you want to do in advance."

She said in countries that criminalize prostitution, including Canada, sex workers report having their condoms confiscated by police as evidence of criminal behaviour, so many choose not to carry them.

Criminalization means sex workers are less likely to seek out treatment if they become infected, according to The Lancet series. Chu said in Canada, if they're incarcerated they may also experience interruptions or difficulty accessing treatment.

Chu and Strathdee, and others at the AIDS conference, point to New Zealand and New South Wales in Australia. Both jurisdictions have repealed laws that made sex work illegal. The results have been dramatic, Chu said.

"Where criminal laws have actually been removed, rates of HIV and sexually transmitted infection are very, very low, rates of condom use are very, very high, and sex workers as a whole feel very empowered to insist on safer sex with their clients."

About .01 per cent of people age 15 to 49 are infected with HIV in New Zealand. In Canada the prevalence is more than double that, according to UNAIDS.