The health and well-being of our people is not a matter of luck. It pertains how a person feels physically, mentally and socially to perform its role in the society. It is not a chance or random event. It must be a planned outcome. According to the American Diabetes Association stated that U.S spent far more than any other nation in the world on health care in 2006. They also stressed that improved health status is of economic value to U.S citizens. Specifically, health starts at home; a family needs its members to have sound health for the smoother, fuller, and happier living. The study of nutrition is therefore one of the requirements for understanding of world problems as well as those which are involved in prostitution. For this reason, …show more content…
He discusses the worldwide ramifications of various aspects of sex--AIDS, beauty pageants, prostitution, abortion, sterilization programs, genital mutilation, and others--always showing the complexities of the problems. Health Effects of Prostitution Women in prostitution are targeted as the problem instead of making the sex industry problematic and challenging the mass male consumption of women and children in commercial sex. This is institutionalized when governments and NGOs argue for the medicalization of prostitution when they propose laws on prostitution which subject women to periodic medical check-ups. It is stated that women in the sex industry would be better protected if they submitted, or were required to submit, to health and especially STD screening. The health consequences to women from prostitution are the same injuries and infections suffered by women who are subjected to other forms of violence against women. The physical health consequences include: injury (bruises, broken bones, black eyes, …show more content…
Paul who had been prostituted for at least six months found that 1/2 the women had been physically assaulted by their purchasers, and 1/3 of these experienced purchaser assaults at least several times a year. 23% of those assaulted were beaten into a coma. Furthermore, 90% of the women in this study had experienced violence in their personal relationships resulting in miscarriage, stabbing, loss of consciousness, and head injuries. The sex of prostitution is physically harmful to women in prostitution. STDs (including HIV/AIDS, chlamydia, gonorrhea, herpes, human papilloma virus, and syphilis) are alarmingly high among women in prostitution. Only 15% of the women in the Minneapolis/St. Paul study had never contracted one of the STDs, not including AIDS. General gynecological problems, but in particular chronic pelvic pain and pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), plague women in prostitution. The emotional health consequences of prostitution include severe trauma, stress, depression, anxiety, self-medication through alcohol and drug abuse, and eating disorders. Almost all the women in the Minneapolis/St. Paul study categorized themselves as chemically-addicted. Crack cocaine and alcohol were used most frequently. Ultimately, women in prostitution are also at special risk for self-mutilation, suicide, and homicide. 46% of the women in the Minneapolis/St. Paul study had attempted suicide, and 19% had tried to harm themselves