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International Journal of Epidemiology logoLink to International Journal of Epidemiology
letter
. 2011 Feb 15;40(5):1421–1422. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyr021

The social context of sexual HIV prevention among female sex workers in China

Joseph D Tucker 1,
PMCID: PMC3204207  PMID: 21324942

The recent article on scaling up programmes to prevent sexual human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission is timely and addresses a compelling topic.1 However, there are two points that should be emphasized in understanding how to organize an effective response to China’s expanding sexually transmitted HIV epidemic: (i) the heterogeneity within China’s commercial sex industry; and (ii) the unique organizational and social forces that constrain responses.

First, China has >6 million female sex workers (FSWs), based on conservative estimates derived from self-reporting in a population-representative sample.2 Public health and social science research from China suggests that there are distinct typologies of FSW, each with distinct workplaces and sexual risks (Table 1).3 Several studies show that low-income FSWs in China have a higher risk of syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs), including one systematic review of 72 studies that found a 2-fold increased risk of syphilis among low-income FSWs.4 Yet, there have been few interventions focused on low-income FSWs and methodologically rigorous epidemiological studies are limited.

Table 1.

Chinese FSW typologies and their workplace and approximate sexual risk

graphic file with name dyr021i1.jpg

Low-income FSW categories shaded.3

Second, some sources have described sex work as ‘illegal’ in China, but this does not appreciate the complex relationship between women who sell sex and local authorities. A common Chinese saying is that police have ‘one eye open and one eye closed’ when considering sex work. Male police and other local authorities have many incentives both to curtail and to permit commercial sex.5 A better understanding of these local relationships informed by epidemiology and social sciences could help illuminate strategies for FSW HIV prevention.

Given the remarkable heterogeneity in socio-demographics and sexual risk among FSWs in China, simple policy solutions or importing models from Asian successes should be viewed with caution. Policy solutions for preventing heterosexual HIV that resonate with local FSWs and acknowledge the embedded and highly contextual nature of sexual risk have not been piloted in China and are far from scaling up. More research and programmatic efforts to identify and curb high-risk commercial sex are urgently needed.

Funding

This research was supported by a Career Development Award [NIH FIC 1K01TW008200-01A1] and the UNC Social Science Research on HIV/AIDS in China Program [NIH NICHD R24 HD056670-01].

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to Dr Ying-Ying Huang at the People’s University in Beijing, China, who provided comments on an earlier version of this letter.

References

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