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Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use

Discrimination and violence against sex workers by police are common in many populations and are associated with negative health outcomes, as well as being per se violations of human rights laws and norms. There is a close and mutually reinforcing nexus between legally actionable rights violations a...

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Autores principales: Mbote, David Kuria, Nyblade, Laura, Kemunto, Caroline, Giger, Kayla, Kimani, Joshua, Mingkwan, Pia, Njuguna, Stella, Oga, Emmanuel, Kraemer, John D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Harvard University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7762893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33390707
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author Mbote, David Kuria
Nyblade, Laura
Kemunto, Caroline
Giger, Kayla
Kimani, Joshua
Mingkwan, Pia
Njuguna, Stella
Oga, Emmanuel
Kraemer, John D.
author_facet Mbote, David Kuria
Nyblade, Laura
Kemunto, Caroline
Giger, Kayla
Kimani, Joshua
Mingkwan, Pia
Njuguna, Stella
Oga, Emmanuel
Kraemer, John D.
author_sort Mbote, David Kuria
collection PubMed
description Discrimination and violence against sex workers by police are common in many populations and are associated with negative health outcomes, as well as being per se violations of human rights laws and norms. There is a close and mutually reinforcing nexus between legally actionable rights violations and stigma, and reducing human rights violations against sex workers likely requires both legal and societal interventions that address both. In this paper, we first aim to estimate levels of discrimination, violence, and stigma against women sex workers by police in Kenya. Second, we aim to estimate the association between manifestations of discrimination and stigma, on the one hand, and general health care utilization and consistent condom use, on the other. Using data from a survey of Kenyan sex workers, we document widespread discrimination and stigma. Through regression analyses, participants with the highest levels of all three categories of manifestations of discrimination and stigma reported significant lower consistent condom use. Those with the highest levels of witnessed/heard manifestations were significantly more likely to delay or avoid needed health care, and the highest level of experienced manifestations were associated with a marginally significant increase in delay or avoidance. Our findings document a plethora of violations of human rights obligations under Kenyan and international law.
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spelling pubmed-77628932020-12-31 Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use Mbote, David Kuria Nyblade, Laura Kemunto, Caroline Giger, Kayla Kimani, Joshua Mingkwan, Pia Njuguna, Stella Oga, Emmanuel Kraemer, John D. Health Hum Rights Research-Article Discrimination and violence against sex workers by police are common in many populations and are associated with negative health outcomes, as well as being per se violations of human rights laws and norms. There is a close and mutually reinforcing nexus between legally actionable rights violations and stigma, and reducing human rights violations against sex workers likely requires both legal and societal interventions that address both. In this paper, we first aim to estimate levels of discrimination, violence, and stigma against women sex workers by police in Kenya. Second, we aim to estimate the association between manifestations of discrimination and stigma, on the one hand, and general health care utilization and consistent condom use, on the other. Using data from a survey of Kenyan sex workers, we document widespread discrimination and stigma. Through regression analyses, participants with the highest levels of all three categories of manifestations of discrimination and stigma reported significant lower consistent condom use. Those with the highest levels of witnessed/heard manifestations were significantly more likely to delay or avoid needed health care, and the highest level of experienced manifestations were associated with a marginally significant increase in delay or avoidance. Our findings document a plethora of violations of human rights obligations under Kenyan and international law. Harvard University Press 2020-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7762893/ /pubmed/33390707 Text en Copyright © 2020 Mbote, Nyblade, Kemunto, Giger, Kimani, Mingkwan, Njuguna, Oga, and Kraemer. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research-Article
Mbote, David Kuria
Nyblade, Laura
Kemunto, Caroline
Giger, Kayla
Kimani, Joshua
Mingkwan, Pia
Njuguna, Stella
Oga, Emmanuel
Kraemer, John D.
Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use
title Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use
title_full Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use
title_fullStr Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use
title_full_unstemmed Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use
title_short Police Discrimination, Misconduct, and Stigmatization of Female Sex Workers in Kenya: Associations with Delayed and Avoided Health Care Utilization and Lower Consistent Condom Use
title_sort police discrimination, misconduct, and stigmatization of female sex workers in kenya: associations with delayed and avoided health care utilization and lower consistent condom use
topic Research-Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7762893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33390707
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