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Srpski arhiv za celokupno lekarstvo 2017 Volume 145, Issue 11-12, Pages: 611-617
https://doi.org/10.2298/SARH161213102Z
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Female street sex work in Belgrade as risk environment for a syndemic production: A qualitative study

Žikić Bojan (Faculty of Philosophy, Department of Ethnology and Anthropology, Belgrade)
Milenković Miloš ORCID iD icon (Faculty of Philosophy, Department of Ethnology and Anthropology, Belgrade)

Introduction/Objective. Although female street sex workers are contextually vulnerable to numerous health-endangering factors, they also contribute in re-producing them. This synergetic production is approached by syndemic theory developed within medical anthropology. The objective of the study is to present an analysis of the results of a qualitative ethnographic study conducted in Belgrade, Serbia in 2015, and reflect upon social environment factors influencing syndemic development of medical conditions. Methods. The risk environment factors enhancing possibilities of developing particular medical conditions were investigated by applying qualitative anthropological methodology, emphasizing semi-structured in-depth interviews, a standard qualitative sample, and respondents’ self-reporting. Results. Social environment of sex work, generally considered risky due to sexually and blood-transmitted diseases, in this study also proved as receptive for many other illnesses, whose syndemic character has been insufficiently addressed. The study confirmed the syndemic nature of street sex work. Conclusion. The social science perspective should be used in health policy conceptualization and implementation not only during latter stages, i.e. in the interpretation of the social conditions influencing medical related issues, but during early stages of understanding how those conditions and issues circularly constitute each other.

Keywords: medical anthropology, qualitative research, street sex work, risk environment, syndemics: health policy

Project of the Serbian Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Grant no. 177017 and Grant no. 177018