Citation
Jennings Mayo-Wilson, Larissa; Yen, Bing-Jie; Nabunya, Proscovia; Bahar, Ozge Sensoy; Wright, Brittanni N.; Kiyingi, Joshua; Filippone, Prema; Mwebembezi, Abel; Kagaayi, Joseph; & Tozan, Yesim, et al. (2023). Economic Abuse and Care-Seeking Practices for HIV and Financial Support Services in Women Employed by Sex Work: A Cross-Sectional Baseline Assessment of a Clinical Trial Cohort in Uganda. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 38(1-2), Np1920-49. PMCID: PMC9636073Abstract
Economic hardship is a driver of entry into sex work, which is associated with high HIV risk. Yet, little is known about economic abuse in women employed by sex work (WESW) and its relationship to uptake of HIV prevention and financial support services. This study used cross-sectional baseline data from a multisite, longitudinal clinical trial that tests the efficacy of adding economic empowerment to traditional HIV risk reduction education on HIV incidence in 542 WESW. Mixed effects logistic and linear regressions were used to examine associations in reported economic abuse by demographic characteristics, sexual behaviors, HIV care-seeking, and financial care-seeking. Mean age was 31.4 years. Most WESW were unmarried (74%) and had less than primary school education (64%). 48% had savings, and 72% had debt. 93% reported at least one economic abuse incident. Common incidents included being forced to ask for money (80%), having financial information kept from them (61%), and being forced to disclose how money was spent (56%). WESW also reported partners/relatives spending money needed for bills (45%), not paying bills (38%), threatening them to quit their job(s) (38%), and using physical violence when earning income (24%). Married/partnered WESW (OR = 2.68, 95% CI:1.60-4.48), those with debt (OR = 1.70, 95% CI:1.04-2.77), and those with sex-work bosses (OR = 1.90, 95% CI:1.07-3.38) had higher economic abuse. Condomless sex (URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/08862605221093680Reference Type
Journal ArticleYear Published
2023Journal Title
Journal of Interpersonal ViolenceAuthor(s)
Jennings Mayo-Wilson, LarissaYen, Bing-Jie
Nabunya, Proscovia
Bahar, Ozge Sensoy
Wright, Brittanni N.
Kiyingi, Joshua
Filippone, Prema
Mwebembezi, Abel
Kagaayi, Joseph
Tozan, Yesim
Nabayinda, Josephine
Witte, Susan S.
Ssewamala, Fred M.