“I would do anything but that”: Attitudes towards sex work among rural people who use drugs

Original research
by
Rains, Alex et al

Release Date

2023

Geography

USA

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

Yes

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

Yes

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

This study aimed to explore how people who use drugs in rural counties across the United States appraise sex work by themselves or other community members.

Findings/Key points

Participants expressed negative attitudes towards sex work as a function of its criminal-legal repercussions or framed sex work as morally transgressive. Many appraisals were gendered, with the behavior conveyed as being “easier” for women who were often described as “whores,” with more neutral terms used to describe men. Some viewed sex work as an implicit “exchange” for drugs. Several participants noted a lack of agency as a feature leading to involvement in sex work, with partner power dynamics influencing an individual's behavior. Finally, a few participants acknowledged the circumstances under which they would newly engage in sex work.

Design/methods

Qualitative interview data (n=355) came from the Rural Opioid Initiative (ROI), a project coordinated by research teams across 65 rural counties in 10 states.

Keywords

Rural/remote
About PWUD
Sex/Gender