Human trafficking of children and adolescents: recognition and response in the emergency department.
Abstract
Labor and sex trafficking impact children of all ages, genders, and nationalities.
Trafficked patients present to the emergency department for illnesses and injuries
both related and unrelated to their trafficking experiences. Emergency clinicians
are not meant to be experts in labor and sex trafficking, but they must know enough
to be able to identify patients at risk for trafficking and ensure that these patients
have the opportunity to be connected to relevant services and support. This issue
reviews the ways in which youth are trafficked, the indicators of trafficking, and
the evidence-based and best-practice recommendations for addressing suspected or confirmed
trafficking in the pediatric and adolescent patient populations.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26231Collections
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Larissa Truschel
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
I am a pediatric emergency medicine physician with a research interest in child health
advocacy, health equity, and medical education. I chose pediatric emergency medicine
because I enjoy taking care of children and supporting their families, whether the
child has a minor or severe illness or injury. My academic work focuses on health
equity and social justice. I have worked with community organizations nationally and
internationally in the areas of social screening, health outcome d

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