Title: STOLEN SMILES
1STOLEN SMILES Physical and mental health
consequences of women and adolescents
trafficked in Europe
Funding from the European Commissions Daphne
Programme, Sigrid Rausing Trust, International
Organization for Migration
2How big is the trafficking problem?
?
3STAGES OF THE TRAFFICKING PROCESS
Pre-departure
Integration and reintegration
Travel and transit
Health risks and opportunities
Detention, deportation, criminal evidence
Destination
4Spheres of marginalisation and vulnerability
Migrant women
Violence against women Torture victims
Trafficked women
Trafficked women
Exploited labourers
Sex workers
5Recruitment Equation
PUSH PULL FACTORS
DECIDING FACTORS
Vulnerabilities Hopes Strengths
CREDIBILITY OF THE OFFER Timing of the
offer Quality of the offer
ACCEPTS OFFER
6Study of trafficked women accessing services in
seven European countries
- Study participants
- Women adolescents accessing services in
Moldova, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Italy,
Bulgaria, Czech Republic Belgium. - Trafficked into forced sex work (92) domestic
labour (4), and both (3). - Ages 15 to 45 from 14 countries, the majority
from Moldova and Ukraine. - 38 had children, of whom 82 were single
parents. - 81 exploited for at least one month, 20 over
one year. - Three interviews conducted 207 women interviewed
0-14 days after entry into care, 170 between
28-56 days, and 63 at 90 days.
7Violence women experienced prior to being
trafficked
8Violence women experienced during trafficking
9Identifying a trafficking situation How often
were you free?
10Multiple physical health symptoms that improve
with support services
0-14 Days
28-56 Days
90 Days
11The most common physical health symptoms reported
by women at 0-14 days
63 memory problems
81 headaches 71 dizzy spells
69 back pain
60-70 various sexual health problems
82 fatigue
12How the memory gets disrupted
Fight or flight response to danger Peritraumatic
dissociation Loss of details
13Levels of psychological distress are high, with
multiple presenting symptoms
28-56 days
90 days
0-14 days
14What is a post-traumatic response?
- Severe or prolonged traumatic experiences can
result in an individual being unable to turn-off
their basic biological and safety alarm
mechanisms or cause them to have an
all-or-nothing physical and emotional response
to negative stimuli - Repetitive helplessness of this kind may result
in disorganising the cognitive processes, or
disable an individuals instinctive ability to
respond appropriately.
15Post-traumatic stress disorder
16Changes in post-traumatic stress symptom levels
Post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms
17Mental health improvements
Depression Anxiety Hostility
0-14 days
28-56 days
90 days
18Trafficked womens mental health compared to a
general female population
0-14 days
28-56 days
90 days
19Reactions are individual
I feel like theyve taken my smile and I can
never have it back. Lithuanian woman trafficked
to London
Maybe some people could call me a dirty whore,
but for others I might be the girl who can give
them good advice. Moldovan woman trafficked to
Turkey
20WORKING WITH WOMEN WHO HAVE BEEN TRAFFICKED
21Give Control and Establish Trust
- 1. EXPLAIN AND INFORM
- The purpose for the questions and the process,
step by step. - General subjects that will be discussed and
acknowledge difficulty of some questions. - Who will and who will NOT have access to the
information. - She may return to difficult questions later.
- If she does not understand something, she should
ask for it to be repeated slowly or explained
differently.
22Give Control and Establish Trust
- 2. INQUIRE ABOUT HER
- How are you feeling? Are you currently in any
pain or discomfort? - Are you hungry or thirsty? Do you want to use
the toilet? - Is there anything that is making you feel unsafe
right now, or that you might be harmed? - Do you have any questions that you want to ask
me? - Do you have any urgent concerns or fears that you
want to tell me about before I ask you some
questions? Are you ready to start?
23Give Control and Establish Trust
- 3. BE ON HER SIDE
- Ask questions in a way that shows she is believed
and that you have concern for her - What was done to her vs. what she did
- Did you feel free to go where you wanted? vs. Did
you ever try to escape? - Did anyone hurt you while you were in this
country? before How did you enter this country? - Are you worried for anyone in your family? before
What is your home address?
24Of benefit to the victim benefit to the case
Comforted, comfortable individual
Physical comfort
Psychological comfort
More thoughtful, more reliable, accurate
information
Time
25About Sexual Violence
A history of sexual violence
RISK-TAKING sexual substance misuse
26A Complex Victim Group
- Disclosure barriers
- Fear of retaliation by traffickers
- Guilt of her perceived complicity in what
occurred - Guilt over any criminal activities in which she
participated - Shame about what she has done, particularly
sexual activities - Little trust in officials, e.g., police,
immigration, health workers
27Interpreters
- Security- DO NOT USE VOLUNTEER INTERPRETERS
- No discrimination - against sex work, migrants,
women - No neighbours no one from the same village or
town, or local destination community - Gender may prefer a female or male
- Warn against any disclosure, with criminal
sanctions, e.g., official secrets, data
protection act
CHECK ACCEPTABILITY OF INTERPRETER WITH THE WOMAN
HERSELF
28A senior police officer referring to a victim who
refused to cooperate
I feel that she was really too scared, but it was
her decision. Our offer was made in fairly
hostile conditions, during a police interview.
This is a case where a three month reflection
period would have been useful. London
Metropolitan police officer
29Trafficking legislation and the recovery and
reflection period
Council of Europe Convention on Action Against
Trafficking Article 13 Recovery and reflection
period 1. Each Party shall provide in its
internal law a recovery and reflection period of
at least 30 daysSuch a period shall be
sufficient for the person concerned to recover
and escape the influence of traffickers and/or to
take an informed decision on cooperating with the
competent authorities.
30Recommendations (1)
- Recognise the serious health consequences of
trafficking - Pass legislation requiring a full range of health
services be provided to trafficked women,
regardless of their legal status. - Establish procedures to require authorities to
ensure that upon contact with a woman suspected
of having been trafficked, her health needs are
assessed and urgent needs are immediately
addressed.
31Recommendations (2)
- 4. Legislate a minimum 90 day period of
reflection and recovery during which time women
will - receive appropriate and adequate support services
- not be required to make decisions about
cooperating with authorities or about returning
home - 5. Prohibit the detention, removal or deportation
of trafficked women until their health needs have
been met and their safety for return assessed - 6. Provide services based on models of good
practice used for survivors of other forms of
violence and for minority or refugee communities.
32Recommendations (3)
7. Increase involvement of health sector in
trafficking dialogue and activities. 8. Train
relevant health professionals to provide
appropriate physical, sexual, reproductive and
mental health care for trafficked womens
needs 9. Codes of service provision should draw
on models of good practice used for survivors of
other forms of violence, and/or minority
communities refugees.
33Guiding principles for conducting ethical and
safe interviews with women who have been
trafficked
- Do no harm
- Ensure safety, security and comfort
- Ensure privacy
- Ensure confidentiality
- Provide information
- Request informed consent
- Ask questions in a sensitive and sensible
manner by paying attention to the purpose,
sequence and tone of the question - Listen actively and responsively by not
talking, asking questions and providing
clarification, giving the person time to answer,
being perceptive and acknowledging what the
person says - Observe signs indicating the woman needs a
break during the procedure - Consider any preconception and prejudices you
may hold - Believe, do not judge
- Maintain professionalism while treating persons
with respect and compassion - Ensure trafficked persons feel in control of
their body and communications - Reassure trafficked persons they are not to
blame - Inform trafficked persons of their right to a
forensic medical exam and report - Inform the individual of their rights to copies
of all health medical records - Remind the trafficked person of their strengths
34Suggested citation
- Zimmerman, C. 2006. Presentation on the health
consequences among women who have been trafficked
and their implications for services and policy.
London London School of Hygiene Tropical
Medicine. - The full report, Stolen Smiles, is available at
- www.lshtm.ac.uk/genderviolence