Louisville Medicine Volume 61, Issue 11 | Page 14

(continued from page 11) gency department or health clinic has a policy to examine patients alone. Create a safe, confidential, trusting environment with minimal staff members coming in contact with the victim. Ensure the patient you are there to help and they are entitled to assistance. Victims must know you are there to keep them safe, not to “turn them in.” Always use an interpreter or translator phone. Trafficking victims will not refer to themselves as such and usually have severe toxic stress related to their conditions. Keep questions open such as the following: yy Where do you work? yy How did you get your job? Did you get the job you were promised? yy Can you come and go as you please? yy How do you get money to buy food or clothes? yy When was the last time you saw your parents? yy Where do you sleep and eat? yy Do you have a boyfriend? If so, what is his name and age? yy Has he/she ever suggested or forced you to have sex with other men for money? yy Has anyone ever given you money/drugs/food/shelter in exchange for sex? Documentation of the answers to these questions in the patient’s chart is important in helping social services and police investigate the situation. If you suspect that someone is a trafficking victim, call the National Human Trafficking Resource Center (NHTRC) hotline at 1-888-3737-888. Once that call is made, you will be connected with local resources in your community to help you proceed. In Kentucky there are several local agencies that can provide assistance should you come in contact with a potential trafficking victim. The KY Rescue & Restore Coalition, operated through Catholic Charities in Louisville, is the main service provider for trafficking victims in this state. Their website is: www.rescueandrestoreky.org. There are also several human trafficking task forces in Kentucky that you could join to keep up to date on the latest information on trafficking in your community. The contact information for these task forces is listed on the KY Rescue & Restore website. The Kentucky Association of Sexual Assault Programs (KASAP), also a KY Rescue and Restore partner, works to provide informed care to traumatized victims through its network of 13 rape crisis centers. KASAP chairs the Statewide Human Trafficking Task Force and is avail- 12 12 LOUISVILLEMEDICINE MEDICINE LOUISVILLE able to train law enforcement, attorneys, health care and other professionals on human trafficking. The H.O.P.E. Children Campaign is a new street outreach aimed at providing resource information to domestic minors of sex trafficking. Workers in various parts of the state on behalf of “Helping Our Prostituted & Exploited Children” are doing outreach where they can. Volunteers with the campaign distribute chapsticks labeled with the hotline number to businesses that are at high risk of coming into contact with trafficking victims (i.e. hotels, bus stations, truck stops, etc.). For more information on this outreach, contact Kentucky Rescue and Restore at www.rescuea