| Literature DB >> 25059950 |
Chris Beyrer1, Anna-Louise Crago2, Linda-Gail Bekker3, Jenny Butler4, Kate Shannon5, Deanna Kerrigan6, Michele R Decker7, Stefan D Baral7, Tonia Poteat7, Andrea L Wirtz8, Brian W Weir7, Françoise Barré-Sinoussi9, Michel Kazatchkine10, Michel Sidibé11, Karl-Lorenz Dehne11, Marie-Claude Boily12, Steffanie A Strathdee13.
Abstract
The women, men, and transgender people who sell sex globally have disproportionate risks and burdens of HIV in countries of low, middle, and high income, and in concentrated and generalised epidemic contexts. The greatest HIV burdens continue to be in African female sex workers. Worldwide, sex workers still face reduced access to needed HIV prevention, treatment, and care services. Legal environments, policies, police practices, absence of funding for research and HIV programmes, human rights violations, and stigma and discrimination continue to challenge sex workers' abilities to protect themselves, their families, and their sexual partners from HIV. These realities must change to realise the benefits of advances in HIV prevention and treatment and to achieve global control of the HIV pandemic. Effective combination prevention and treatment approaches are feasible, can be tailored for cultural competence, can be cost-saving, and can help to address the unmet needs of sex workers and their communities in ways that uphold their human rights. To address HIV in sex workers will need sustained community engagement and empowerment, continued research, political will, structural and policy reform, and innovative programmes. But such actions can and must be achieved for sex worker communities everywhere.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25059950 PMCID: PMC4302059 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60933-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321