Learning Objectives
After completing this application-based continuing education activity, pharmacists will be able to
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After completing this application-based continuing education activity, pharmacy technicians will be able to
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Release Date: March 1, 2023
Expiration Date: March 1, 2026
Course Fee
Pharmacist $7
Technician $4
There is no grant funding for this CE activity
ACPE UANs
Pharmacist: 0009-0000-23-006-H99-P
Pharmacy Technician: 0009-0000-23-006-H99-T
Session Codes
Pharmacist: 23YC06-KAB48
Pharmacy Technician: 23YC06-BAX92
Accreditation Hours
2.0 hours of CE
Accreditation Statements
The University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education. Statements of credit for the online activity ACPE UAN 0009-0000-23-006-H99-P/T will be awarded when the post test and evaluation have been completed and passed with a 70% or better. Your CE credits will be uploaded to your CPE monitor profile within 2 weeks of completion of the program. |
Disclosure of Discussions of Off-label and Investigational Drug Use
The material presented here does not necessarily reflect the views of The University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy or its co-sponsor affiliates. These materials may discuss uses and dosages for therapeutic products, processes, procedures and inferred diagnoses that have not been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration. A qualified health care professional should be consulted before using any therapeutic product discussed. All readers and continuing education participants should verify all information and data before treating patients or employing any therapies described in this continuing education activity.
Faculty
Sarah Meade, BS
PharmD Candidate May 2023
UConn School of Pharmacy
Storrs, CT
Jeannette Y. Wick, RPh, MBA
Director, Office of Pharmacy Professional Development
UConn School of Pharmacy
Storrs, CT
Faculty Disclosure
In accordance with the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE) Criteria for Quality and Interpretive Guidelines, The University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy requires that faculty disclose any relationship that the faculty may have with commercial entities whose products or services may be mentioned in the activity.
Jeannette Wick and Sarah Meade do not have any relationships with ineligible companies and therefore have nothing to disclose.
ABSTRACT
Americans may widely underestimate human trafficking’s current extent in the United States because of stereotypes about traffickers, victims, and sex workers, and also because many Americans lack knowledge about this topic. Despite the general public’s lack of knowledge, trafficking reports are rapidly increasing in the United States today. Healthcare for trafficking victims and survivors is often complicated due to clinicians’ lack of sensitivity about a patient’s trafficking experiences. Because victims of human trafficking are highly likely to seek medical care while under a trafficker’s control, training healthcare providers to identify, handle, and report suspected human trafficking is critical. Without trafficking education, providers’ biases and misunderstanding of victim trauma may hinder the ability to develop a trusting patient-provider relationship. Pharmacy teams should know how to identify human trafficking while protecting victims’ safely, providing appropriate resources for victims to seek help, and assisting with individualized treatment selection.
CONTENT
Content
Introduction
Human trafficking is a growing concern globally. Americans may widely underestimate human trafficking’s current extent in the United States (U.S.) because of stereotypes about traffickers, victims, and sex workers, and also because many Americans lack knowledge about this topic. Despite the general public’s lack of knowledge, trafficking reports are rapidly increasing in the United States today. The SIDEBAR defines terms associated with human trafficking.
SIDEBAR. Human Trafficking Definitions1,2
- Human Trafficking: Recruitment, transfer, transportation, or receipt of people through force, manipulation, fraud, or threats to achieve control over a person for exploitation
- Sex worker: A person who voluntarily provides sex work regularly or occasionally in commercial exchange for money or goods. Sex work differs from sexual exploitation, or the forcing of a person to commit sexual acts.
- Survivors: people who have escaped their trafficking situations
- Survivor-informed practice: Including meaningful input from a diverse community of survivors at all stages of a program or project, including development, implementation and evaluation
- Traffickers: people using force, manipulation, threats, or fraud to force victims into exploitative situations
- Trauma-informed care: collaborating with community resources to empower individuals to determine their own futures
- Venue: The place in which trafficking occurs; human trafficking does not necessarily involve crossing state or international borders
- Victims: people currently in an exploitative situation
In 2010, Faith Robles, a 14-year-old teenager from Mexico, moved in with her boyfriend’s family in Queens, New York.3 The family promised her a job that would “change her life,” but she did not learn this involved sleeping with men against her will—sometimes up to 30 men daily—until after her boyfriend smuggled her into the U.S. At the time, Robles was unaware that her boyfriend and four of his relatives were involved in a human trafficking ring. After she arrived, the family threatened to kill her family and traffic her sister if she sought help from authorities or did not comply with their demands. Robles was a victim of sex trafficking for three and a half years, suffering multiple beatings, sexual assaults, and a broken jaw following an escape attempt. She was finally able to escape at age 17 when she sought help from police officers.3 Hearing from survivors like Faith Robles has helped healthcare providers develop interventions that are survivor-informed. This continuing education activity will cover several aspects of human trafficking as it relates to pharmacy using evidence collected by reliable organizations and researchers.
Unfortunately, many victims in the U.S. today share stories like Robles’. In August 2022, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) announced that they located and identified 84 minors who were victims of sex trafficking during a nationwide sex trafficking operation. FBI agents found an additional 141 adult victims. Human trafficking rates continue to increase in the U.S. Reports of human trafficking to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children Tipline increased from 21.7 million to 29.3 million reports from 2020 to 2021.4 Readers should note that collecting and reporting data on human trafficking has some limitations; many cases of human trafficking are never reported.5 Sometimes it’s because the victims are afraid or under a trafficker’s strict control and cannot seek help. Sometimes, it's because people who might be able to help a victim do not recognize the problem or have no idea how to help. Sometimes, it’s because systems have not looked at the issue, determined what (if anything) the system’s responsibilities are, and established policies and procedures to prevent trafficking and provide help.
Readers should also note that to be considered human trafficking, the trafficker need not move a victim across state or international borders; thinking that movement is a necessary component of human trafficking is a common misperception. Current federal laws only require that the trafficker has met the criteria for the 3 elements of “act,” “means,” and “purpose.”6
- ACT means that the trafficker has recruited, transported, transferred, harbors, or received a victim
- MEANS indicates the trafficker has used threat or use of force, coercion, fraud, deception, abuse of a position of vulnerability, payments or benefits, or abduction
- PURPOSE is very simple; the trafficker’s sole purpose is to exploit the victim
In short, these requirements indicate that someone who coerces an individual to provide sex or labor against their will in exchange for housing or drugs would be considered a human trafficker, as doing so is exploitation. Someone who moves victims from place to place is also a trafficker, and in some states, people or organizations that knowingly harbor traffickers and their victims would also be complicit in human trafficking.7,8
In 2019, the National Human Trafficking Hotline reported California, Texas, and Florida as the top states for human trafficking with 1,507, 1,080, and 896 reported cases, respectively.9 Human trafficking often occurs along highways that provide access to easy getaways and quick transportation; many traffickers move their victims often to avoid detections. The busiest interstates in the U.S. include I-5 in the West, I-95 in the East, and I-80 stretching from California to New Jersey. The Polaris Project (see SIDEBAR) asserts that common trafficking venues include illicit massage parlors, informal underground businesses, and hotels and motels along major highways. For this reason, the National Association of Truck Stop Operators and large hotel chains, such as Marriott, offer training to help employees identify and report human trafficking victims.10
Pause and Ponder: How likely is your pharmacy to interact with victims or survivors of human trafficking? Why?
SIDEBAR. The Polaris Project
The Polaris Project is a nonprofit social justice organization that fights sex and labor trafficking through the U.S. National Human Trafficking Hotline. Polaris uses survivor-driven trafficking data to improve trafficking identification, provides assistance for victims and survivors, and educates the community. More information on the Polaris Project can be found on its website (https://polarisproject.org/).11
Polaris hosts the National Human Trafficking Hotline around the clock. Readers should make note of this resource, as it will often be the first and safest place to seek help when patients indicate or pharmacy staff suspects that an individual is being trafficked.
- Web site: https://humantraffickinghotline.org/en in English
- Web site: https://humantraffickinghotline.org/es in Spanish
- 1-888-373-7888
- TTY: 711
- Text* 233733
Human trafficking is a crime under federal and international law. The International Labor Organization estimates that the human trafficking “industry” generated $32 billion in 2005, making it the third largest source of income for organized crime.12,13 Current estimates are unavailable but would clearly be much larger. Human trafficking victims can come from any background and may live for years under their trafficker’s control. Victims may be trafficked by their own family, friends, or acquaintances with or without the victim’s knowledge.14,15
Human traffickers prey on others in reprehensible ways.16 Policy makers, public health groups, and researchers have tried to understand the motives behind human trafficking to identify factors that would help develop anti-trafficking interventions. Many publications indicate traffickers become involved primarily for financial gain because the profits associated with human trafficking can be enormous. Many of the interventions currently employed identify traffickers by tracking large quantities of cash and banking patterns. Recent research has found that in some cases, traffickers make considerably less money than expected. These traffickers may be motivated by cultural norms, ideology, or religions that devalue human life. Traffickers may be former victims who go on to recruit and control others. And some traffickers simply have sociopathic tendencies.16
Traffickers use various tactics to manipulate victims, including14
- Debt-bondage
- Emotional manipulation
- Lies or deceit
- Subjecting victims to unstable or unpredictable conditions
- Physical, sexual, or psychological violence
- Threats against family members
- Transporting victims to unfamiliar places to create a language barrier
- Withholding documents
Pre-trafficking vulnerabilities for victims include poverty, trauma, domestic violence, learning difficulties, lack of educational or work opportunities, loss of family, community- or gender-based violence, and natural disasters.2 Human trafficking survivors with vulnerabilities are at higher risk of re-victimization. The SIDEBAR describes types of human trafficking.
SIDEBAR. Types of Human Trafficking15,17,18
All forms of human trafficking include exploitation, abuse of vulnerable situations, psychological violence, and deprivation of freedom. Added physical and/or sexual violence is also common. Specific types of trafficking may include one or more of the following:
- Sex trafficking: forcing someone to sell sex; more commonly affects women but often happens to children of both sexes
- Forced labor: involuntary servitude, often in industries with large numbers of workers and little regulation; most common element of modern-day slavery
- Domestic servitude: jobs related to domestic help; often hidden in plain sight
- Debt bondage: begins with debt that the victim is unable to pay immediately; employer exploits the victim by adding additional expenses to increase debt
- Other forms: forced marriage, organ removal for sale, and enforced crime
Readers should note that human trafficking differs from human smuggling. In human smuggling, the purported purpose is to transport or hide individuals who lack proper documentation (e.g., passports, driver’s licenses, or other identification) and circumvent officials without regard to immigration laws (a transportation-based crime). The people smuggled across borders often have chosen to be smuggled as a means to reach an otherwise inaccessible destination. Victims of human trafficking are generally held in circumstances against their will. Nevertheless, traffickers may also use victims’ immigration status and threaten to deport victims to coerce victims to do as they are told. In some cases, smuggling may lead to trafficking.
With 30% to 88% of U.S. trafficking victims seeking healthcare at least once during captivity, life-saving identification of trafficking victims in healthcare settings is crucial.19 Several researchers have attempted to estimate how many victims seek healthcare, but because of the nature of the topic and the risk associated with disclosure, it’s been difficult. Two studies shed some light on victims’ contact with healthcare providers. In a meta-analysis of 420 victims, 50% to 98% of victims reported seeking healthcare services in diverse medical settings while they were captive.20A second study found that roughly 63% of victims had visited emergency departments (ED) and identified hospitals and ED as their most frequent source of care.21 Trafficking victims tend to use complaint-based episodic acute care services (e.g., minute clinics, urgent care centers, and ED) more often than long-term comprehensive primary care services.22 Each visit represents an opportunity to identify potential behaviors, injuries, or actions that may signal victimization. Several studies have documented that healthcare professionals tend to have limited recognition and knowledge of human trafficking.23,24
No data is available about victims’ use of pharmacies, but pharmacy employees in community settings are likely to encounter human trafficking victims. Pharmacists and technicians should be prepared to recognize human trafficking signs for quick, appropriate, and life-saving action.
History of Human Trafficking in the United States
Let’s return to Faith Robles. Fortunately, Ms. Robles pressed charges against her boyfriend and his family for the damages and trauma she endured during captivity. In 2020, a judge sentenced Robles’ boyfriend and his family to prison terms of between 25 and 40 years under charges of “sex trafficking, sex trafficking conspiracy, sex trafficking of minors, interstate prostitution, alien smuggling, and money laundering conspiracy.”3 However, if Robles had reported her case in the early 1970s, she would not have been able to press charges; the federal government did not incorporate human trafficking crimes into U.S. law until recently.
The first U.S. law for human trafficking was the 1974 Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA). CAPTA required states to establish child abuse reporting laws as a condition of receiving federal funds.25 Mandated reporters and agencies to which people who observe or suspect abuse are to report vary by state law, but generally states require reporting in some capacity. Healthcare providers should always check their states’ applicable laws periodically so they know exactly what the state requires.
Mandated reporters are personnel who must report suspected or confirmed exploitation, abuse, or neglect of vulnerable populations. Alabama, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington state laws specifically list pharmacists as mandated reporters for child victims. Other states list mandated reporters as “healthcare personnel” or people responsible for the care and/or treatment of child victims. Most states do not require mandatory reporting by healthcare personnel for victims 18 years old or older unless the adult is elderly or in some way vulnerable. States that do not require healthcare providers to report adult victims may do so because of the victims’ heightened safety risk, vulnerability, mistrust in authorities, and fear of their traffickers.26 Federal law does not currently require states to mandate reporting for adults or provide funding to meet reporting requirements.
The Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) of 2000 created the first comprehensive federal law to address human trafficking. The TVPA offered immigration relief for human trafficking victims, creation of public educational programs for prevention of future trafficking, and increased prosecution of trafficking.25,27 In January 2023, Congress reauthorized this Act. TVPA reauthorization added some additional coverage28:
- It increases protections for child survivors of human trafficking
- It provides funding for state welfare agencies to identify and assist child victims of human trafficking and work more closely and efficiently with the juvenile justice system
- It eliminates barriers to services for child victims of human trafficking: consent from a parent or guardian is no longer necessary to apply for ID and other forms of identification, making it easier for children to apply for benefits and services
- It expands support for research concerning social media’s impact on human trafficking
In 2013, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) created the Stop, Observe, Act, and Respond (SOAR) program to provide human trafficking training to healthcare and related professionals. The program includes victim identification and implementation of best practices for necessary reporting, referrals, communication, and treatment. In 2018, the HHS required public posting of best practices on the HHS website for entities receiving federal grants.29 SOAR’s program for individuals and groups are available at https://nhttac.acf.hhs.gov/soar/soar-for-individuals/soar-online.
In 2015, the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act (JVTA) improved U.S. trafficking response. The law strengthened victim resources, including increasing individuals’ criminal liability if they buy commercial sex from victims, creation of the survivor-led U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking, and a national strategy for combating human trafficking.30
Current human trafficking reporting laws are inconsistent due to variations among states; federal law does not clearly define a “mandated reporter” and does not require healthcare providers to report trafficking victims 18 years old or older.25 The American Hospital Association; the law firm of Jones Day; and the Health, Education, Advocacy, Linkage (HEAL) Trafficking network have collated state-specific reporting requirements for healthcare providers on the HEAL Trafficking website (https://healtrafficking.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Human-Trafficking-and-Health-Care-Providers_Legal-Requirements-for-Reporting-and-Education-02_25_21.pdf).26
Pause and Ponder: What policies do you currently have in place to identify victims?
Healthcare Providers & Human Trafficking
Human trafficking victims are often in situations that compromise their health and safety. Most trafficked people seek healthcare from licensed providers at some point during their exploitation. Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians in outpatient settings may interact with victims without realizing their situation. Healthcare providers should be able to recognize possible victims and survivors confidently and take appropriate action to intervene if needed2; however, most health professionals report that they are unfamiliar with how to identify or respond to a trafficked person effectively.31
The Pharmacy Team in Action
Pharmacists’ involvement on the healthcare team is increasing and expanding from dispensing drugs to include medication and disease management and more expansive responsibilities. Pharmacy is unique because the available healthcare counseling is highly accessible by the public.
For safety and reporting, pharmacy team members should generally trust their instincts in a suspicious situation, especially when patients2,31,32
- Act as if under control of another person, i.e., another person accompanies the patient, speaks for them, or there is a lack of rapport between the patient and accompanying individual
- Report a history of frequent address changes, vagueness about where they live and/or medical history
- Are present at a time when they should be in school
- Have poor or concerning physical appearance suggesting captivity, neglect, and/or physical harm, i.e., poor hygiene or inappropriate clothing for current weather conditions or for their age (i.e., clothing is more promiscuous or revealing than normal for a teen)
- Present with illnesses or injuries not easily explained, especially repeated or partially treated concerns
- Exhibit signs and symptoms of self-harm, suicidal ideation, depression, or drug or alcohol misuse
Many state laws require pharmacists to counsel patients on new prescriptions. Prescription filling patterns that may signal trafficking include frequent sexually transmitted infection (STI) treatment, no insurance coverage, cash-only payments, prescriptions routinely lost or stolen, or a medical history of prescriptions from acute care clinics rather than a primary care physician.33 Victims may be hesitant to access healthcare because of safety concerns and are more likely to self-treat using over the counter (OTC) medications. Table 1 lists frequently used or misused OTC products for self-treatment, and this information may assist pharmacists and pharmacy technicians with screening for potential victims. Upon suspicion of trafficking, pharmacists should try to screen the patient privately.
Table 1. OTC Products Frequently Used or Misused for Self-Treatment of Trafficking-Associated Medical Concerns34,35
Health Concern | OTC Products |
Mental health and substance abuse | St. John’s Wort
Dextromethorphan Diphenhydramine Pseudoephedrine Phenylephrine |
Sexual intercourse or urinary tract infection | Condoms
Levonorgestrel (Plan B) Miconazole Pregnancy tests Phenazopyridine Genital anti-itch creams |
Physical abuse | Painkillers (i.e. acetaminophen, ibuprofen, aspirin)
First aid items (i.e., bandages, gauzes, antiseptics, Neosporin) |
Privacy is essential to obtaining accurate and sensitive information that a victim might otherwise not be comfortable with sharing, especially for victims who fear for their safety and accompanied by an abuser. When pharmacy team members try to speak to the patient alone, they should remain calm and ask for privacy cautiously. The pharmacy team may emphasize the importance of privacy to the accompanying individual, perhaps by saying, “I’m going to step in here and speak to [patient’s name] alone because these are deeply personal health issues.” Note that this approach doesn’t ask a question—which might give the trafficker wiggle room to argue—but instead states a fact in a neutral manner. However, pharmacy staff should not push if they experience push-back from the suspected trafficker. Most pharmacies have a separate space for consultation or vaccinations that they may use when patients need privacy or to review sensitive information.
Pause and Ponder: What are some ways your pharmacy team can work to improve health outcomes for victims and survivors of human trafficking?
Avoiding Bias + Using the Correct Language
Pharmacy team members should be aware of their language when speaking to victims; personal biases may perpetuate stereotypes and influence clinical decision making for therapy or diagnoses.
Well-intentioned but poorly informed organizations or people can perpetuate stereotypes that are not evidence-based or all-encompassing. Understanding bias and perpetuated stereotypes reduces barriers to optimal healthcare. Stereotypes associated with trafficking including victim appearance, location, traffickers, or current situations prevent victims from escaping and/or receiving treatment.1 Table 2 addresses common stereotypes or myths associated with human trafficking in the United States. Pharmacy team members should question, acknowledge, and resolve their personal biases towards trafficking to reduce stigmatizing language and shame.
Table 2. Common Human Trafficking Myths vs Reality1,36
Myth | Reality |
Human trafficking victims are always undocumented foreign women or children. | Victims can be any age, sex, ethnicity, or legal status. Sensationalized imagery of victims in the media, such as on TV or in the news, creates bias and provides an inconsistent narrative. Researchers estimate as many as half of all victims and survivors are male, but healthcare professionals are less likely to identify males as victims. |
All commercial sex is human trafficking. | Commercial sex is not human trafficking if the patient is an adult and gives informed consent for all activities involved. |
Traffickers always hold victims against their will. | Victims may stay involved in trafficking due to lack of resources to leave, fear for their safety, or manipulation by the trafficker. Victims may face shame from their trauma, including cultural attitudes about prostitution, debt, poor health conditions because of captivity, or working conditions. |
Labor trafficking is only an issue in developing countries. | Labor trafficking occurs in the U.S. but is reported less often than sex trafficking. |
Human trafficking is always a violent crime. | Human trafficking rarely includes physical force such as kidnapping. Most traffickers manipulate victims through psychological means such as defrauding, manipulating, or threatening vulnerable populations. |
If individuals consented to be in their initial situation, they are not victims of trafficking. | Initial consent to commercial sex or labor prior to force, manipulation, or fraud is irrelevant if the situation becomes one of coercion and exploitation later. |
Healthcare providers should always use strength-based language to avoid victim blaming. For example, providers should refrain from using the term “child pornography,” and instead refer to it as “child sexual abuse materials.”1 For sex trafficking victims, they should refer to sexual acts during captivity as “exploitation” rather than “prostitution.”
Victims may experience intense shame surrounding their experiences that limits their ability to seek medical attention. Healthcare equity for trafficking victims starts with establishing trust. To gain trust, providers should identify and eliminate unconscious biases to improve service accessibility and health outcomes.
HEALTH CONSEQUENCES FOR VICTIMS
Traffickers often expose victims to numerous health risks before, during, and after exploitation and may restrict victims’ access to care. A key indicator of human trafficking is delayed care. Many patients have reasons to delay care (e.g., lack of insurance, no transportation, or difficult access to care), but delayed care in combination with other flags may indicate a patient is in trouble.37,38 Victims’ lack of access to proper care and poor environmental conditions may lead to deterioration or exacerbation of conditions.39
Mental Health and Addiction
Due to mental exhaustion from trauma, most victims face debilitating mental health issues. Victims may present with signs and symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, dissociation, and substance use disorders. Serious symptoms warranting need for behavioral health therapy may include
- Difficulty sleeping
- Feeling detached or withdrawn
- Guardedness
- Hopelessness
- Recurrent thoughts of trauma
- Sudden emotional reaction when reminded of trauma
- Suicidal ideation
- Tendency to startle easily
Drug or alcohol addiction may exacerbate victim vulnerability, be used as a coping mechanism, or be a part of the trafficker’s tactic to keep victims hostage. An anti-trafficking service provider reported that 66% of victims claimed their substance use led to being trafficked, while 4.5% claimed their substance use began after being trafficked.40 Substance use throughout victimization occurred in 84.3% of victims, with the most common substances used being alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, and opioids.40 Due to high mortality rates from opioid overdoses, patients who are or have been trafficked warrant screening for opioid addictions.
Healthcare providers need to engage in trauma-informed care when helping victims of human trafficking.41 The experience of trauma overwhelms the victim’s ability to cope and healthcare providers need to recognize trauma’s impact on victims. They need to employ a trauma-informed approach. A trauma-informed approach has four components41:
- Realizing trauma’s pervasive impact and the potential paths victims can follow for recovery
- Recognizing trauma’s signs and symptoms in individuals, families, staff, and others involved in the system
- Responding in a manner that fully integrates knowledge about trauma into policies, procedures, and practices
- Taking care to communicate in ways that actively avoid retraumatization
A trauma-informed approach means collaborating with community resources to empower individuals to determine their own futures.41 Using the NHTRC hotline is a good way to initiate contact with community resources, as its staff is trained to help healthcare providers determine and identify the next best steps when trafficking is suspected or reported.
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) supplies additional information on child trauma-informed care for patient and provider use (https://www.samhsa.gov/childrens-awareness-day/child-traumatic-stress-resources).40
Unprotected Sexual Intercourse
Victims of sex trafficking are at elevated risk for STIs and unwanted pregnancies. Pharmacists should attempt to counsel victims of sex trafficking on proper testing or screening, including the common signs and symptoms of various STIs, types of tests, and when and how to test. The CDC lists specific STI treatment guidelines on its website (https://www.cdc.gov/std/treatment-guidelines/default.htm).42
Monkeypox (now called Mpox) has been an emerging concern particularly for men who have sex with men. Monkeypox presents as a painful rash accompanied by fever, lethargy, muscle aches, and headaches.43 More information on monkeypox presentation, treatment and prevention can be found in UConn’s You Asked For It CE titled, “Go Bananas: Peel Away the Unknowns of Monkeypox.”
In female patients of childbearing age who have had recent unprotected sexual intercourse, pharmacists may recommend OTC emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs), or an intrauterine device (IUD) or “morning after” pill if allowed by state law.
Copper IUDs are a highly effective emergency contraceptive when inserted up to five days after sexual intercourse. This extended period for use and high efficacy rate may be beneficial for victims of human trafficking who may not have immediate access to emergency contraceptives, but IUD insertion can be expensive, and the trafficker may not allow the victim to see a qualified provider. The most common side effects for IUDs are heavy menstrual bleeding, spotty menstruation, or abdominal discomfort. Because victims of sex trafficking may have increased risk for STIs, victims should generally be tested and/or treated for STIs prior to IUD insertion and monitored after insertion.44
ECPs contain either levonorgestrel or ulipristal acetate (UPA) with 1.2% and 1.2-2.1% efficacy, respectively. UPA-containing ECPs are more effective between 72 and 120 hours post-intercourse than levonorgestrel-containing ECPs. Side effects may include nausea, vomiting, fatigue, and irregular vaginal bleeding.44
More information on emergency contraception eligibility criteria and safety is located on the World Health Organization’s (WHOs) website.44 In any emergency contraceptive, efficacy decreases as the time between intercourse and treatment increases. Pharmacists should inform patients that contraceptives do not induce abortions.
Physical Abuse
Victims may be vulnerable to physical abuse in captivity. Common signs of physical abuse are bruises, wounds, fractures, internal injuries, chronic pain, or head, neck and back injuries. Physical abuse may also present as substantial weight loss, dehydration, malnutrition, increased vulnerability to illness, and insomnia. Physical abuse is a medical emergency; if a patient’s safety is in danger, the pharmacy must report the situation to authorities immediately if the patient is a minor. States may require pharmacists to report abuse of an adult under state-specific mandatory reporting laws.
Acting on Human Trafficking
Upon suspicion or confirmation of trafficking, pharmacy technicians should alert the pharmacist and pharmacists should try to see the patient alone when possible. All involved staff must remain vigilant about everyone’s safety and avoid directly challenging the victim and/or accompanying individual. Direct confrontation, or raising the suspicion of an accompanying individual, can put a victim at risk of additional harm. It’s critical to note repeatedly that intervention can be dangerous. Most authorities indicate that the best action is to call the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1(888) 3737-888 or call 911.38
In instances that involve language barriers, pharmacists should advise the accompanying individual that professional interpreters may be needed instead of relying on ad hoc interpreters (untrained children [who should only be used in emergencies], friends, family, or untrained staff).45-51 The reasons for working alongside interpreters (and interpreters prefer healthcare providers use the term “working alongside” rather than “using” to reflect that this is a collaborative endeavor) are evidence-based. Ad hoc interpreters are more likely to make mistakes, violate confidentiality rules, and increase risk of adverse outcomes. Professional interpreters are also fluid speakers and need not stop and think or reformulate language before translating. Untrained interpreters often leave out the niceties of language—niceties that increase trust and cultural understanding between patient and provider. When using an interpreter, the clinician should address the patient directly and seat the interpreter next to or slightly behind the patient. 45-51 Readers who want to learn more about the nuances of professional interpretation may be interested in What’s in a Word? A Guide to Understanding Interpreting and Translation, available online for free at https://www.ncihc.org/assets/documents/publications/Whats_in_a_Word_Guide.pdf.
Pharmacists and technicians should be patient, compassionate, and sensitive to build trust and gather sufficient information. Since 2011, the Institute of Medicine and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services have recommended screening for intimate partner violence and abuse by asking patients, “Do you feel safe at home?” at each visit.52 In 2013, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force also made this recommendation. Although the question was meant to identify intimate partner violence, it has identified other types of abuse. This question surprises many patients, and many healthcare practitioners find it uncomfortable to ask. Pharmacy staff might ask this question, but it probably should not be the first question to the suspected victim. Saving this and similar questions should come after establishing some rapport with the patient and the patient seems comfortable. Regardless, patients may not answer truthfully or at all, but just asking the question let’s victims know that someone cares, and help is available.52 When interviewing patients, pharmacists should ask “trauma-informed” questions but consider the harmful effect of reliving traumatic experiences.2 Table 3 provides additional appropriate example questions when screening patients for human trafficking.
Table 3. Example Screening Tool for Suspicion of Human Trafficking2,14,17
- Are you limited as to who you can talk to and when?
- Do you have the freedom to leave your current job?
- Do you have to ask permission for necessities, such as eating or using the bathroom?
- Do you owe your employer money or other debts?
- Has anyone ever physically hit, threatened, or raped you or anyone you work with for any reason?
- Has anyone ever forced you into sexual intercourse for work?
- Has anyone threatened your family?
- Has anyone threatened you with deportation?
- Is someone else controlling your money or finances?
- Is someone else in control of where you are allowed to go?
- Is someone else in control of your identification documents, including your birth certificate or passports?
- Was someone else in control of your travel arrangements to the U.S.?
- What is your working or living condition like?
Healthcare providers may be unable to help patients involved in human trafficking—affected individuals may be too afraid to engage. Individuals need to be able and willing to help themselves. Providers should also offer patients choices; if the patient does not verbalize immediate danger, pharmacists can gently discuss reporting to police, non-government organizations, or helplines. When patients do not want to act, healthcare providers should prioritize care for the patient’s health conditions, gain the victim’s trust, and document clearly. Pharmacy teams should write down any information that may be helpful in an investigation, including time of day, address, and vehicle information, if available.
Providers must always consider security risks. Pharmacy staff should never attempt to confront a potential human trafficker or victim directly. They should try to arrange follow-up with patients and document their contact information. Pharmacists may also ask for consent to call the patient’s primary care provider.
That said, pharmacy teams need to follow statutory and healthcare organization procedures at all times. Again, the National Human Trafficking Resource Center (NHTRC) hotline is available for pharmacy teams to use and pharmacy personnel can call the hotline for guidance. The NHTRC helps providers identify local resources and coordinate with social service organizations. It’s hotline is available 24/7 at 1 (888) 3737-888 or text HELP or INFO to “BeFree” (233733). Pharmacists may choose to submit an anonymous tip online on the NHTRC website (https://humantraffickinghotline.org/report-trafficking).33 If the patient is a minor or in imminent danger, a staff member should stay with the patient, remain calm, and contact 911 or the local police department when it is safe to do so.
Providers should do their best to ensure proper self-care after a stressful or intense situation.
Conclusion
Faith Robles is now a spokeswoman, advocate, and aftercare provider for victims of human trafficking which demonstrates that victims, when they can access help, can survive and flourish.53 Pharmacy teams should remain vigilant when encountering suspicious circumstances. Trafficking victims may have multiple health issues because of their trauma and abuse. Pharmacy team members can easily recognize signs of human trafficking through prescription, disease, or behavioral patterns. Individualized screening and determination of the type of trafficking involved is necessary for treatment recommendations and referrals. Pharmacy teams should address victims’ concerns while considering the patient’s health, safety, and personal hardships. Pharmacies may advocate for federal and/or local legislation focused on trafficking prevention and education to drive large-scale change.
Pharmacist Post Test (for viewing only)
PHARMACIST POSTTEST
Learner Questions for Pharmacists
Learning Objectives
At the end of this continuing education activity, pharmacists will be able to
• Review the history and current laws of human trafficking in the United States
• Recognize common terms, warning signs, and/or vulnerabilities for human trafficking in pharmacy patients/customers
• Describe pharmacists’ impact on identifying and supporting victims and survivors of human trafficking
• Ensure proper referral, treatment, and counseling for common health risks associated with human trafficking
1. Which of the following statements describes the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) of 2000?
a. TVPA was the first law to address child trafficking reporting laws
b. TVPA offers immigration relief for victims and survivors of human trafficking
c. TVPA created the US Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
2. Which of the following is a federal law and a state-specific law that addresses healthcare providers’ responsibilities regarding human trafficking?
a. Reporting of human trafficking victims 17 years old or younger
b. Specific definitions of “mandated reporters”
c. Mandated human trafficking training for healthcare workers
3. Which act included increased individuals’ criminal liability if they buy commercial sex from victims?
a. The Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA)
b. The Stop, Observe, Act, and Respond (SOAR) to Health and Wellness Act
c. The Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act (JVTA)
4. Which action may result in increased harm for human trafficking victims when accompanied by an individual?
a. Asking to see the patient alone during private exams because your state requires prescription counseling
b. Allowing the accompanied individual to act as an interpreter when there is a language barrier
c. Staying aware of your own safety when encountering a victim and accompanying individual
5. Which of the following situations during counseling may suggest a patient may be a victim of human trafficking?
a. A 37-year-old female patient approaches the consulting window alone asking to pick up her birth control prescription 2 days earlier than allowed by insurance
b. A patient calls the pharmacy asking about selection of vaginal itch creams and pregnancy tests three separate times within one month
c. A smiling 9-year-old patient accompanied by his legal guardian picking up a new prescription for an albuterol inhaler for the child
6. When heightening awareness of human trafficking, what do healthcare providers need to know?
a. Human trafficking victims are likely to seek healthcare at least once during captivity
b. Human trafficking victims are predominately female adults aged 25 to 34
c. Traffickers often force victims into trafficking through physical force such as kidnapping
7. A young woman visits the pharmacy accompanied by a man who seems to hover and intervene in your conversations with the woman. You are able to gently pry her away and interview her in the counseling room. She tearfully says that 4 days ago she had unprotected sexual intercourse with a man who told her he may have an STI after they had sex. Which emergency contraceptive would you choose for her?
a. Ulipristal acetate (UPA) emergency contraceptive pills
b. Levonorgestrel emergency contraceptive pills
c. Refer her for a copper intrauterine device
8. A young male who is unkempt and has a prescription for an antibiotic used to treat syphilis listens intently as you counsel him on how to take the medication. You ask him how he has been feeling in general in an attempt to build trust. He says that his clothes have gotten tight, has missed school because he sleeps heavily all night and oversleeps often, and he periodically experiences headache, fatigue, dizziness and thirst. Which symptom set may indicate he may be a victim of human trafficking?
a. His clothes have gotten tight
b. Oversleeping
c. Headache, fatigue, dizziness and thirst
9. Alex, Ben, and Carrie each describe symptoms that seem to suggest opioid addictions. Alex, 17, says that he has used heroin since he was 12. Ben, 42, says that he currently has little access to opioids and needs treatment to reduce craving. Carrie, 15, says that she uses alcohol when her “friend” cannot find opioids for her. Which patients are most in need of screening for possible human trafficking?
a. Alex and Ben
b. Ben and Carrie
c. Carrie and Alex
10. The lead technician comes to you and says that she tried to complete medication reconciliation for a young woman. She is 16 years old and has just been admitted to the emergency department for abdominal pain that started with a diagnosis of chlamydia two weeks ago. Now, she may have pelvic inflammatory disease. The patient does not speak English. The woman’s companion said that he would translate for her because she has antisocial personality disorder. Choose the BEST way to approach this dilemma.
a. Say, “Are you aware that your actions seems suspicious? Either let us talk to her in private or we are going to call the police”
b. Say, “We have called a translator, and we’ll speak to [patient’s name] alone because these are deeply personal health issues.”
c. Say, “You have a choice here. We can use the hospital translator with or without you present, and you can take your friend and leave AMA.”
Pharmacy Technician Post Test (for viewing only)
Learner Questions for Pharmacy Technicians
At the end of this continuing education activity, the pharmacy technician will be able to
• Review the history and current laws of human trafficking in the United States
• Recognize common terms, warning signs, and/or vulnerabilities for human trafficking in the pharmacy
• Identify signs/signals of human trafficking red flags to notify pharmacists or law enforcement
1. Which of the following statements describes the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) of 2000?
a. TVPA was the first law to address child trafficking reporting laws
b. TVPA offers immigration relief for victims and survivors of human trafficking
c. TVPA created the US Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
2. Which of the following is a federal law and a state-specific law that addresses healthcare providers’ responsibilities regarding human trafficking?
a. Reporting of human trafficking victims 17 years old or younger
b. Specific definitions of “mandated reporters”
c. Mandated human trafficking training for healthcare workers
3. Which act included increased individuals’ criminal liability if they buy commercial sex from victims?
a. The Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA)
b. The Stop, Observe, Act, and Respond (SOAR) to Health and Wellness Act
c. The Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act (JVTA)
4. Which of the following is a pre-trafficking vulnerability for victims?
a. Natural disasters
b. High insurance copays
c. Well-paying occupation
5. Which of the following types of trafficking matches its definition below?
a. Forced Labor: involuntary servitude, often from industries with large numbers of workers and little regulation
b. Domestic servitude: begins with debt that cannot be paid immediately; employer exploits the victim by adding additional expenses to increase debt
c. Debt bondage: forcing someone to sell sex
6. Which of the following OTC products are human trafficking victims most likely to use or misuse?
a. Esomeprazole (Nexium)
b. Oxymetazoline (Sinex)
c. Acetaminophen (Tylenol)
7. Which statement below is a common myth regarding human trafficking in the United States?
a. Labor trafficking exists in the United States, but public health officials less often report labor trafficking compared to sex trafficking
b. All commercial sex is human trafficking
c. Human trafficking rarely uses physical force such as kidnapping
8. Select the patient interaction that should prompt you to inform your pharmacist of potential human trafficking.
a. A young adult patient who hands you a handwritten list of their prescriptions and medical history
b. An adolescent whose breath smells of alcohol and is dressed in shorts and a tank top for 10⁰F weather in January
c. A female patient asking to fill her birth control 2 days earlier than her insurance will cover because she’s going on vacation to Miami tomorrow
9. Three patients confirm that they are human trafficking victims but state that they are not in imminent danger and ask you not to contact authorities. You MUST contact the authorities for one patient under federal law. Which one is it?
a. An 18-year-old patient who has not showered in 3 weeks
b. An 11-year-old patient accompanied by her father
c. A 23-year-old patient taking medications for his anxiety disorder
10. Upon suspicion of human trafficking, which of the following is an appropriate intervention for pharmacy technicians?
a. Directly confront the individual accompanying the victim and tell them to stay where they are while you get the pharmacist
b. When alone with the patient, start a discussion with in-depth questions about their trauma for a more detailed background
c. Prioritize everyone’s safety, inform the pharmacy team of the situation, and call the authorities when appropriate
References
Full List of References
REFERENCES
References
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