Literature DB >> 32124571

Social representations of female sex workers about their sexuality.

Pablo Luiz Santos Couto1, Bianca Pereira Correia Montalvão2, Arilene Rodrigues Silva Vieira3, Alba Benemérita Alves Vilela4, Sérgio Correia Marques5, Antônio Marcos Tosoli Gomes6, Núbia Rego Santos7, Luiz Carlos Moraes França8.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To know the social representations of female sex workers about their sexuality.
METHODS: Qualitative study based on the Theory of Social Representations. Thirty-nine women from a health region of Alto Sertão Produtivo Baiano - Brazil agreed to participate. For the production of empirical data, the techniques of Free Word Association and in-depth interviews were used. The answers were analyzed based on Constellation Target Content Analysis and Semantic Content Analysis.
RESULTS: Two thematic categories emerged: "negative representation of sexuality"; "my pleasure is the money". Therefore, the theme sexuality and meanings derived from the social representations elaborated by the sex workers about sexuality, based on their experiences and daily life, showed that the work involved a negative representation of sexuality when associated with sexual satisfaction with the client, in addition to the allusion to sex as a source of income.
CONCLUSIONS: The social representations about sexuality constructed by sex workers are linked to the feeling of denial of pleasure and obtaining money for subsistence. Reflecting on sexuality points out ways to rethink the care to be provided for a stigmatized and vulnerable group. Copyright by the Universidad de Antioquia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  female; pleasure; qualitative research; sex workers; sexual behavior; sexuality

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32124571      PMCID: PMC7871475          DOI: 10.17533/udea.iee.v38n1e03

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest Educ Enferm        ISSN: 0120-5307


  8 in total

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2.  Reflections on the history of bareback sex through ethnography: the works of subjectivity and PrEP.

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3.  Sexuality and HIV prevention: consensus and dissent of Catholic youths.

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4.  Private sex workers' engagement with sexual health services: an online survey.

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5.  Regulating sex work: subjectivity and stigma in Senegal.

Authors:  Ellen E Foley
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2016-06-06

Review 6.  The Peer and Non-peer: the potential of risk management for HIV prevention in contexts of prostitution.

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7.  AIDS and jail: social representations of women in freedom deprivation situations.

Authors:  Débora Raquel Soares Guedes Trigueiro; Sandra Aparecida de Almeida; Aline Aparecida Monroe; Gilka Paiva Oliveira Costa; Valéria Peixoto Bezerra; Jordana de Almeida Nogueira
Journal:  Rev Esc Enferm USP       Date:  2016 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.086

8.  The principles of the Brazilian Unified Health System, studied based on similitude analysis.

Authors:  Ana Paula Munhen de Pontes; Denize Cristina de Oliveira; Antonio Marcos Tosoli Gomes
Journal:  Rev Lat Am Enfermagem       Date:  2014 Jan-Feb
  8 in total

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