Chinese Sex Workers In Australia Needs Analysis - 2006 - 2007
個人資料
Demographics
年齡
69% 31 or older 31 或以上
Age
在家鄉的職業
31%工人
had been sex workers in China
Other backgrounds included police, beautician, bank cleric
職業健康及安全
Occupational Health and Safety
有否絕對堅持要客人用安全套?
97%是
use condoms always with clients
this is the same as Australian-born sex workers
當懷疑自己患上性病時,你會如何處理?
93%求醫
go to the doctor for STI check-ups
this is the same as Australian-born sex workers
你在澳洲期間從何得到所需的資訊?
Accessing Services In Australia
84%性健康中心
Accessed sexual health clinic
50%
Accessed sex worker organisation
工作時遇到的問題
Problems while working
在你工作的地方你遇到过暴力事件吗
66%否
have never been sexually assaulted at work
如何處理上述情況
51%報警
would call the police if sexually assaulted in Australia.
This is equal to, or higher, than Australian-born sex workers
法律知識
Knowledge of the law
是否清楚自己享有的法律權利?
74% were clear on their rights
81%公平
believe the laws in Australia are fair
會否再來澳洲工作
75%會
hope to come back to Australia again
Methodology
In April 2006 Zi Teng (Hong Kong) approached Scarlet Alliance to assist with a survey of Chinese Sex Workers in Australia. The Scarlet Migration Working Party Chinese-Speaking sub-committee focus tested and amended the survey, & produced Chinese language consent agreements. Ethics approval was granted by ACON and Inner-South Community Health Service. MOU’s were signed with participating organisations. Surveys were collected in Sydney by SWOP (29), in Adelaide by SIN (13) in Melbourne by RhED, SWOP, SIN and Zi Teng (1) and in Canberra by Zi Teng and SWOP ACT (0). A total of 43 surveys were collected.
Confidentiality
Anti-trafficking initiatives seek witnesses for criminal prosecution from Chinese sex workers in Australia. While not illegal, migrant sex workers fear detection and deportation as a result of anti-trafficking measures. Thus community researchers felt unable to illicit migration data without compromising future peer education HIV prevention work. Methodology was required to overcome this ethical issue. The Australian-based multilingual Chinese speaking health educators, who were also researchers on this project, redesigned the survey for the Australian setting. This included use of “optional” questions for issues of ethical concern. Surveys were self-completed and anonymous and consent was given orally rather than signed. More than 55% of participants completed the optional sections, relating to migration pathways.
Customers
Half of the participants (51%) of sex workers saw between 4 and 6 customers per day. Others saw 3 (15%), between 7 – 9 (26%) or 10 (8%). Almost all (92%) participants saw clients in Australia who are not from a Chinese background. 70% spoke English at work, 50% spoke Mandarin and 17% spoke Cantonese. Most sex workers (68%) saw clients who visited them regularly. While more than half (61%) worked more than 8 hours per day, a sizable percentage (35%) worked less than 8 hours.