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Prevalence at seaThe Department of Health of the Philippines, which supplies the largest number of seafarers of any country, conducted a study of HIV prevalence between January 1984 and December 2003 and found that 12 per cent of an estimated 2,001 persons who were HIV-positive were seafarers and 10 per cent were sex workers. The main mode of transmission in the majority of all cases (85 per cent) was sexual. Of the 2,001 people, 32 per cent originated from the Philippines and worked overseas, and seafarers, who accounted for 38 per cent of HIV-positive overseas workers from the Philippines, were the most affected group among them. Similarly, the Kien Giang Provincial Committee in Vietnam reported 1,239 cases of HIV-positive persons in 2002 in the province, 10 per cent of whom were seafarers. Risky behaviourAll seafarers certainly do not fit the stereotype of “having a woman in every port”, but casual sexual relations can become frequent, owing to isolation, the strong sex industry presence in many ports of call, and the limited opportunities for leisure or to spend earnings in other ways while at sea.Lifestyle studies show that for the same reasons seafarers are more likely than the general population to engage in a range of risky behaviours, such as drinking, which in turn may easily lead to unsafe sex. Few seafarers are aware of the HIV-related risks which accompany drunkenness and the associated state of lost inhibition. When inebriated, people can become more courageous about visiting sex workers, lose awareness of risk, and forget to use condoms. Other risk factors are drug use and misinformation, or plain lack of information. Even when seafarers attempt to engage in healthy lifestyles and to avoid risky activities, the lack of options or access to other leisure activities may defeat them. Women seafarers regularly report sexual harassment and occasionally rape. Heterosexual relationships among seafarers aboard cruise ships are a common feature of shipboard life, and it is often on long journeys that condom use declines. Restricted and frequently non-confidential access to ships’ doctors by crew members, in keeping with the interests of seagoing employers, may be critical factors in the difficulties women seafarers face in getting diagnosed and treated for STIs, as well as for HIV. Extracts from HIV/AIDS and work in a globalizing world, ILO 2005 |
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