Resource List Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine [email protected]

1. US Laws: http://www.state.gov/j/tip/laws/

2. National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) http://www.missingkids.com/home 1.800.THE.LOST

3. Office of Trafficking in Persons http://www.acf.hhs.gov/endtrafficking/programs/rescue-and-restore

4. Polaris Project Polaris Project: www.PolarisProject.com • https://polarisproject.org/human-trafficking • Polaris Project Training: http://www.polarisproject.org/what-we-do/national-human- trafficking-hotline/access-training

5. Office of Justice Programs Training: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/specialfocus/humantrafficking/training.htm https://www.ovcttac.gov/TaskForceGuide/eguide/

6. National Human Trafficking Resource Center https://traffickingresourcecenter.org • 888-3737-888 • 1-888-373-7888 • Text “BeFree” (233733)

7. Childhelp 1.800.4.A.CHILD https://www.childhelp.org

8. See #19 for specific resources for Medical Professionals

9. Office of Justice: Listed are fact sheets and materials for download, organizations and programs for reference, web sites that offer other resources and training, and hotlines to report potential cases. http://ovc.ncjrs.gov/sartkit/focus/culture-tv-d.html

10. Law Enforcement Pocket Card http://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/orr/law_enforcement_pocket_card.pdf

11. Resource for (K-12) Schools: https://safesupportivelearning.ed.gov/sites/default/files/HumanTraffickinginAmericasSchools.pdf

12. Trauma Informed Therapeutics http://www.samhsa.gov/nctic/trauma-interventions https://polarisproject.org/sites/default/files/Sanar-Promising-Practices.pdf http://www.traumainformedcareproject.org

13. Videos • Human Trafficking for Medical Providers: Keys to Freedom. Medical Providers Training Film. Produced by Lauren Stoelzle, and Jack Tichenor, Paul Simon Public Policy Institute, with PA Laurie Ryznyk, Carbondale, IL, 2018. Found at: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1JgFuS4VinGKh7cJuPQPneb98DSxICXn/view?usp=sharing

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk • Any Kid Anywhere (survivor stories – Quad Cities (Illinois/Iowa) https://vimeo.com/147555481 o Produced by Braking Traffik and Emmy-nominated filmmakers Kelly and Tammy Rundle, the film reveals the reality of in small Midwestern communities through the dramatic and harrowing stories of three brave young women. Their true accounts of survival send a message of hope to those already in “the life,” and provide a cautionary tale that may help other young people avoid victimization. • Born Into Brothels (documentary trailer) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ehz3doE56A o This is a full length documentary about the award winning work of a photographer in Calcutta empowering children in the red-light district in India • Nefarious: Merchant of Souls (documentary trailer) regarding global sex trade http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-VC8AUE3Bc o This is a full-length documentary with an excellent overview of world-wide trafficking with excellent film making; at the end has a religious cry from a survivor, which may or may not influence your decision to utilize it. • Department of Homeland Security Blue Campaign videos (sex and labor trafficking) https://www.dhs.gov/blue-campaign/blue-campaign-media • End It Movement Video (Atlanta) – very powerful short clip about girls trafficked for sporting events; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMyExi2q-ZI • Break Free short training video of actual students’ words to girl who was trafficked: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJcYmFUsvW4&feature=youtu.be • Jada Pinkett Smith’s video Children for Sale (1 hour): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXjxeQuhdAs • Diane Sawyer’s Story (video) on Young Girls and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4UN5IcDr-w • For the Record (22 min) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vX5ReSxBaFw) • Look Beneath the Surface; Rescue & Restore (13 min) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqyzW84I3Dc • Eden (movie based on true story trailer) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdbI0Fn4COQ

14. VERA Institute of Justice Trafficking Victim Identification Tool: http://archive.vera.org/sites/default/files/resources/downloads/human-trafficking-identification- tool-and-user-guidelines.pdf (Tool validation and implementation evaluation research was supported by the National Institute of Justice -Award No. 2011-MU-MU-0066.)

15. Boys – specific information regarding males being trafficked http://jjie.org/trafficked-boys-overlooked-underrepresented • Boys Safe House Information: http://www.witn.com/home/headlines/Countrys-First-Safe-House-For-Male-Human-Trafficking- Victims-Coming-To-The-East-246453261.html?ref=261 • Read more at: http://www.commdiginews.com/life/trafficked-boys-vandalized-innocence- hidden-in-plain-sight-26356/#pdT2xu1TVccb115s.99

16. Methods used to recruit victims: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1jyVvl1W3Z8 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3125713/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gSgTmcq-bBk&nohtml5=False Diane Sawyer http://www.mprnews.org/story/2014/09/10/report-maps-minneapolis-sex-trafficking-market https://www.facebook.com/HTTFGM/photos/a.219157524954208.1073741825.21915707495425 3/433642280172397/?type=3&theater

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk 17. Example of Milwaukee’s campaign (action ideas for your town or city: http://unluckythirteen.org

18. End It Movement http://enditmovement.com/

19. Specific Information for Health Care Providers:

• HEAL – An MD lead, interprofessional initiative providing education, research, support, protocol development, and educational tools; Top researchers and leaders in the US are founders or board members of this organization. Several thousand partners worldwide who participate in regular online meetings and sharing of research and educational findings and tools. https://healtrafficking.org

• CMDA – CME programs available for providers https://cmda.org/resources/publication/human-trafficking-continuing-education http://cmda.org/library/doclib/Module-6-ID-and-Med-Eval-of-Sex-Trafficking-Victims-2015-1.pdf

• AMA Journal of Ethics. January 2017. Volume 19, Number 1: 1-131 – Full publication regarding human trafficking

• UpToDate: https://www.uptodate.com/contents/human-trafficking-identification-evaluation-and- management-in-the-health-care-setting

• American Academy of Pediatrics http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/135/3/566

• Health Care http://www.iom.edu/~/media/Files/Resources/guideforhealthcaresector.pdf

• Caring for Trafficked Persons for Health Care Providers Book in PDF: http://publications.iom.int/system/files/pdf/ct_handbook.pdf

• Lederer, L. and Wetzel, C.A. “The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking and Their Implications for Identifying Victims in Healthcare Facilities.” (2014). The Annals of Health Law 23:1. 61-91.

• Campaign to Rescue and Restore Victims of Human Trafficking http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/orr/programs/anti-trafficking

• Doctors at War http://www.doctorsatwar.org/multilingual-phrasebook/ (Phrasebook in 44 languages)

20. Research Articles • http://healtrafficking.wordpress.com/publications/sexual-health • HHS - Government website https://aspe.hhs.gov/basic-report/medical-treatment-victims- sexual-assault-and-domestic-violence-and-its-applicability-victims-human-trafficking • Futterman DC. HIV in adolescents and young adults: half of all new infections in the United States. Top HIV Med, 2005;13(3):101-5.

21. Framework for a Human Trafficking Protocol in Health Care Settings: https://traffickingresourcecenter.org/resources/framework-human-trafficking-protocol-healthcare- settings

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk

22. WHO Guidelines for Interviewing Trafficked Women http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/42765/1/9241546255.pdf

23. Educational Initiatives from HEAL Trafficking (extensive resource list with links) https://healtrafficking.org/education/educational-programs/

24. Teaching cases http://www.humantraffickinged.com/teaching.html

25. Other sites or research: • PATH American Medical Women’s Association Training Toolkit https://www.amwa- doc.org/our-work/initiatives/human-trafficking/ • HEAL (Health professional Education, Advocacy, and Linkage) http://healtrafficking.wordpress.com • Girls Education and Mentoring Services (GEMS): http://www.gems-girls.org • Abolition International: http://abolitioninternational.org http://www.massmed.org/Patient-Care/Health-Topics/Violence-Prevention-and- Intervention/Human-Trafficking-(pdf)/ • http://www.ghspjournal.org/content/2/3/261.full.pdf

26. Articles:

• Greenbaum J, Crawford-Jakubiak J, and Committee on Child Abuse and Neglect. Child sex trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation: Health care needs of victims. Pediatrics. 2015;135;566-574. • Lederer L, Wetzel C. The health consequences of sex trafficking and their implications for identifying victims in healthcare facilities. Ann Health Law. 2014;23(1):61–91 • Macias-Konstantopoulos W. Diagnosis Codes for Human Trafficking Can Help Assess Incidence, Risk Factors, and Comorbid Illness and Injury. AMA Journal of Ethics. 2018;20(12):E1143-1151. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2018.1143. • Stoklosa H, Grace A, Littenberg L. Medical education on human trafficking. AMA J Ethics. 2015;17(10):914-921. • Owens, Colleen, Dank, Meredith, Farrell, Amy et al, “Understanding the Organization, Operation and Victimization Process of Labor Trafficking in the United States”, (2014), Urban Institute • …”Federal Jury in SPCI Case Awards $14 million to Indian Guest workers Victimized in Labor Trafficking Scheme by Signal International and Its Agents”, (2015) splcenter.org/news • Alpert, Elaine, Ahn, Roy, Albright, Erin et al, “Human Trafficking: Guidebook on Identification, Assessment and Response in the Health Care Setting”, Massachusetts General Hospital and Mass. Medical Society, (2014) • Dank, Meredith, Khan, Bilal, Doumey P, et al, “Estimating the Size and Structure of the Underground Commercial Sex Economy in Eight Major US Cities:, (2014) • Bessel A. Van Der Kol, Susan Roth, etc., “Disorders of Extreme Stress: the Empirical Foundation of a Complex Adaptation to Trauma” Journal of Traumatic Stress, (October, 2005) • Hepburn S. and Simon, R. J. “Hidden in Plain Sight: Human Trafficking in the United States”, Gender Issues 22 (2010) • Merry, Sally Engle, “How Big is the Trafficking Problem? The Mysteries of Quantification”, 1- 16-15) Democracy. • Kessler, Glenn, “Why You Should Be Wary of Statistics on “Modern Slavery” and “Trafficking:, (5-13-15) The Washington Post. • Coordination, Collaboration, Capacity, (2013) Federal Strategic Action Plan on Services for Victims of Human Trafficking in the United States. US. Government, Executive office.

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk 27. Texts:

• Chisolm-Straker and Stoklosa. Human Trafficking is A Public Health Issue. (2017) • Bales, Kevin, The Slave Next Door and Blood and Earth • Moore, Anne, Theadbare: Clothes, Sex & Trafficking (2016) • Lloyd, Rachel, Girls Like Us (2011) • Malarek, Victor, The Johns: Sex for Sale and the Men Who Buy it (2011) • Advancing Financial Crime Professionals Worldwide, Financial Institutions and U. S. Officials Join Forces in Detecting Human Traffickers (8-25-15) • Lutnick, Alexandrak “Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking: Beyond Victims and Villains, (2016) • Bolkovac and Lynn, The Whistleblower, (2011) Smith, Holly Austin, “Walking Prey: How America’s Youth are Vulnerable to Sex Slavery”, (2014)

28. Other Videos

• Break the Chain • (updated version) • The Harvest • The Cost of Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking (Dr. Cooper) • Indoctrinated: the Grooming of Our Children into Prostitution • A Path Continues and Half the Sky (Kristof) • CNN series on Human Trafficking • Slavery: A 21st Century Evil (You Tube) • TED Talks, including Kevin Bates and others • Faith-based responses to Human Trafficking • Blue line series—Homeland Security • Girls Like Us—GEMS • PBS Series on Human Trafficking

29. Federal Agencies:

The Federal Strategic Action Plan on Services for Victims of Human Trafficking in the United States, 2013-2017, was developed to unify and focus federal agencies in the fight against human trafficking. The comprehensive strategic plan outlines four actionable goals: • to coordinate federal agencies • to improve understanding of the issue • to expand access to services • to improve outcomes and trauma-informed care Below are the federal agencies that have taken action to implement the FSAP.

Department of Health and Human Services The Anti-Trafficking in Persons Program (ATIP) “identifies and serves victims of human trafficking, assisting foreign trafficking victims in the United States to become eligible for public benefits and services to the same extent as refugees. The program also raises awareness of human trafficking through the HHS Rescue & Restore Victims of Human Trafficking campaign.”

Department of Homeland Security Human Smuggling and Trafficking Unit investigates human trafficking cases particularly involving foreign nationals trafficked into the U.S. and collaborates with the Department of Justice. To report any suspected trafficking activity, call 1-866-347-2423 (toll free, within U.S.) DHS launched The Blue Campaign in 2010 to improve awareness, trauma-based training, victim identification and assistance, and law enforcement. Its catalog of resources- pamphlets, posters, shoe-cards, and info sheets- can be found here.

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk Immigration and Customs Enforcement claims responsibility “for investigating human trafficking, arresting traffickers and protecting victims.” Child Exploitation Investigations Unit/Operation Predator investigates crimes of child sexual exploitation, child pornography, and child sex tourism in the U.S. and abroad. The agency operates 200 offices in the U.S. and 70 overseas. United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) “processes immigration relief through Continued Presence (CP), T visas, and U visas to victims of human trafficking and other designated crimes.” Lawyers and advocates may check on the status of an already submitted case by calling the VAWA Unit Helpline at: 802-527-4888.

Department of Justice Anti-Human Trafficking Task Force Initiative, supported by the DOJ Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), seeks to train law enforcement to identify and rescue trafficking victims and has convened 42 task forces to increase local, state, and federal, and NGO collaboration. Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) offers criminal justice data, including information on human trafficking crimes, for further analysis by the BJA, government groups, and anti-trafficking advocates. Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS) is expert in prosecuting child exploitation and sex tourism, child pornography, parental kidnapping, international child trafficking and abduction, and high-technology child exploitation crimes. Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit (HTPU), established in 2007 by the BJA, prosecutes human trafficking cases and guides lawyers prosecuting cases across overlapping criminal networks. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Civil Rights investigates crimes of human trafficking and offers victim assistance, like repatriation, housing and employment options, and immigration relief. Crimes Against Children (CAC) Innocence Lost Initiative investigates domestic sex trafficking of children in the U.S. National Institute of Justice (NIJ): Funds research on human trafficking- its nature, extent, detection, prosecution, and victim services. Internet Crimes Against Children Task Forces (ICAC), supported by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), assists law enforcement in combating technology-facilitated child exploitation through forensic investigation, technical assistance, victim support, and community engagement. Office of Victims of Crime (OVC): Provides technical assistance to the Anti-Human Trafficking Task Forces, funds comprehensive victim services to dozens of coalitions, programs, and law enforcement groups.

Department of Labor International Labor Affairs Bureau (ILAB): Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor and Human Trafficking focuses on research, policy engagement and technical cooperation to advance the elimination of international child labor, forced labor and human trafficking. It offers a toolkit for responsible businesses here. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) “conducts research and makes recommendations to prevent worker injury and illness, providing practical solutions to identified problems.” Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) seeks to ensure “safe and healthful working conditions for working men and women by setting and enforcing standards and by providing training, outreach, education and assistance.” Wage and Hour Division (WHD) enforces compliance with federal labor standards, such as minimum wage, overtime pay, recordkeeping, child labor requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act. It also oversees violations of the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act and aids human trafficking investigations involving violations of these protections.

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk Department of State Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (J/TIP) “pursues policies, partnerships, and practices that uphold the ‘3P’ paradigm of prosecuting traffickers, protecting victims, and preventing trafficking,” with an emphasis on international governments’ progress. Among its sub-divisions: Reports and Political Affairs seeks to “engage foreign governments regarding human trafficking issues” and produces the annual Trafficking in Persons Report, which ranks over 188 countries, including the U.S., on their anti-trafficking efforts. Public Engagement manages media, government, and NGO outreach to increase public awareness and collective action. It offers a list of resources and information for individuals in the U.S. on a nonimmigrant work or travel visa. Human Smuggling and Trafficking Center centralizes the efforts of the DOS, DOJ, DHS, and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. The Center produces strategic assessments related to smuggling and trafficking, coordinates select initiatives, and recommends specific interagency collaboration.

30. Education Initiatives:

APSAC Practice Guidelines The American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children produced this report addressing the physician’s role in child trafficking, “The Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children: The Medical Provider’s Role in Identification, Assessment and Treatment.” Blue Campaign The U.S. Department of Homeland Security provides patient-oriented contact cards for connection to the 24-hour national hotline for trafficking victims. Please follow the link below to view the Blue Campaign’s video on identifying markers of human trafficking in the clinic setting: http://www.dhs.gov/blue-campaign/medical-clinic-video Caring for Trafficked Persons: A Guide for Health Providers The International Organization for Migration created this guide with support from the UN Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking. It provides advice for the healthcare professional seeking practical skills to understand, identify, and approach trafficking. Caring for Trafficked Persons: Guidance for Health Provider’s Facilitators Guide The Caring for Trafficked Persons Facilitator’s Guide and accompanying materials have been developed for individuals who wish to carry out training to help a concerned health provider understand the phenomenon of human trafficking, recognize some of the associated health problems and consider safe and appropriate approaches to providing health care for trafficked persons. The training is designed for all types and levels of health providers, particularly those actively providing services. Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI): Human Trafficking and the Role of the Health Provider CHI has produced a new clinical education module, “Addressing Human Trafficking in the Health Care Setting.” The 25-minute, web-based education module is publically available for all health care providers and organizations and seeks to increase personal awareness of human trafficking as well as help providers develop the skills to identify and respond to victims. Child Family Health International: Conversations in Global Health CFHI runs free, live webinars at various dates and times throughout the year. Webinars provide information on CFHI’s UN-recognized Global Health Education Programs, various academic partnership options, and other global health topics. A past webinar series entitled Modern Day Abolitionists: Understanding & Combating Human Trafficking as a Health, Social, & Economic Issue was conducted April 2015 and featured HEAL co-founder Dr. Hanni Stoklosa, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and Dr. David Batstone of the Not For Sale campaign, University of San Francisco. You may need to request access from CFHI to view the recording. Confronting Commercial Sexual Exploitation and Sex Trafficking of Minors in the U.S. This guide from the Institute of Medicine/ National Research Council Report includes definitions of key terms and an overview of risk factors and consequences; barriers to identifying victims and survivors as well as opportunities for overcoming these barriers; examples of current practices in the

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk health care sector; and recommendations aimed at identifying, preventing, and responding to these crimes. Domestic Violence with a Special Focus on Human Trafficking The Florida Medical Association Council on Medical Education & Science and the Committee on CME & Accreditation offers this CME supplement to the Florida Medical Magazine, Domestic Violence with a special Focus on Human Trafficking. Essential Access Health’s webinar on Addressing Human Trafficking in Health Care settings This on-demand webinar provides guidance for clinic staff and providers to become more comfortable in identifying patients at risk for trafficking and making referrals for potential victims. It will also explain a trauma-informed approach to best address the health care needs of trafficking survivors and other victims of violence. Expert presenters provide specific recommendations for developing protocols and providing referrals. Presenters: Susie Baldwin, MD, MPH and Renee Marshall, MEd. Futures without Violence and HEAL Trafficking webinar: An Introduction to Labor and Sex Trafficking: A Health Care and Human Rights Challenge This webinar was recorded on July 11, 2016 and is approximately an hour and a half in duration. It provides a brief overview of the problem from a public health, clinical, and human rights perspective; explains how clinicians can identify and respond; and illustrates how forging community and systems partnerships build more effective local responses. Human Trafficking Continuing Education The Christian Medical and Dental Associations offer an accredited continuing education course for physicians to develop care protocols, a holistic approach for treating trafficked patients, screening resources to identify victims, and scriptural references to aid in holistic healthcare. Human Trafficking and Emergency Medicine Mt. Sinai Hospital created a site to provide information and resources for Emergency Healthcare Providers, including three teaching cases. Human Trafficking: Guidebook on Identification, Assessment, and Response in the Healthcare Setting Mass Gen and the Massachusetts Med Society published a manual for healthcare providers on human trafficking to describe the health effects of trafficking and guide practitioners in assessing at-risk and trafficked individuals. It is available for download. Human Trafficking and Healthcare Providers A video by Andrew Baumgartner. Healthcare providers play a crucial role in identifying victims of human trafficking. Learn about Christine’s story about how healthcare workers could have better identified signs and symptoms that she was being trafficked. Human Trafficking: Review of Educational Resources for Health Professionals American Journal of Preventative Medicine’s review of current educational references surrounding the care of human trafficking victims Identifying and Supporting Victims of Human Trafficking: an interactive resource Health practitioners can access an online elearning course on human trafficking offered by the National Health Service in the United Kingdom. Modern Day Abolitionists: Understanding and Combating Human Trafficking as a Health, Social, and Economic Issue This comprehensive webinar will allow attendees to understand the magnitude of the problem, its root causes, and how solutions lie in many realms, including conscious consumerism, broad-based global health programs, astute clinical assessment, effective advocacy, and much more. Dr. David Batstone is co-founder of Not For Sale and professor of ethics and business at University of San Francisco. Dr. Hanni Stoklosa is founder of HEALTrafficking and Human Trafficking & Forced Labor Fellow at FXB Center for Health & Human Rights at the Harvard School of Public Health. You will need to request permission to access the recorded webinar. National Health Collaborative on Violence and Abuse: Webinar: Human Trafficking: The Role of the Health Care Provider This hour-long webinar provides clinicians with knowledge on trafficking and give specific tools for screening, assist victims in the clinical setting, and understand reporting requirements. Featured Speakers: Macias Konstantopoulos, MD, MPH; Natalie McClain, PhD, RN, CPNP; Holly Smith, Survivor of human trafficking

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk National Training Centers: Family Planning: Human Trafficking in the Family Planning Setting This webinar (one and a half hours in duration) provides information about recognizing the signs that indicate a human trafficking victim in a family planning setting. It also covers the steps necessary to respond to and assist victim of human trafficking when they present in a family planning setting. NetCE: CME on Human Trafficking and Exploitation: Physicians Against Trafficking in Humans (PATH) The American Women’s Medical Association founded Physicians Against Trafficking in Humans to unite professionals against trafficking. They offer commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) training sessions and resources here: http://www.amwa-doc.org/our-work/initiatives/human- trafficking Polaris Polaris, one of the nation’s leading anti-trafficking organizations, created the National Human Trafficking Resource Center, offering a series of trainings and reference tools on many issues within trafficking. The National Human Trafficking Resource Center (NHTRC) recently published three resources for healthcare professionals about human trafficking. You can find them here: • A Recorded Presentation: this presentation is approximately 30 minutes and covers both sex AND labor trafficking. • An Assessment Tool • A Fact Sheet for clinicians In addition, their latest 2015 report, Sex Trafficking in the U.S.: A Closer Look at U.S. Citizen Victims, addresses the particular health needs of the trafficked population. Polaris also operates a hotline, 1 (888) 373-7888, that serves healthcare providers seeking resources for potentially trafficked- patients and trafficking victims seeking help. Explore their many resources here: http://www.traffickingresourcecenter.org/resources. Rescue and Restore posters Rescue and Restore, a subset of the Administration for Children and Families, has some resources for health care workers, including awareness raising posters, screening questions, and a power point presentation:http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/orr/resource/rescue-restore-campaign-tool-kits

Safe Horizon’s Guidelines for Healthcare Professionals: Recognizing Human Trafficking Safe Horizon is the largest provider of domestic violence services in the country. This powerpoint presentation is a New York City-specific guide to help health care professionals recognize and follow- up on human trafficking victims when they enter the healthcare system. TEDMED: Dr. Susie Baldwin on Intervention in Human Trafficking in Health Care Dr. Susie Baldwin recounts stories of trafficked people to illustrate the importance of teaching health professionals to recognize the invisible signs of human trafficking and provide trauma-informed care to patients suffering from this hidden crime. The Child Sex Trafficking Webinar Series for Healthcare Professionals The Child Sex Trafficking Webinar Series for Healthcare Professionals is offered by Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. It covers global trends, special topics, the demand for trafficking, medical evaluation of trafficked persons, and a survivor-centered model of care over 6 online modules. It may be completed as live webinars or online training videos. The IOM Handbook on Direct Assistance for Victims of Human Trafficking The health chapter provides comprehensive instructions and advice on health and human rights issues, e.g., conceptual frameworks, ethical and safety principles, issues affecting care, special health considerations, medico-legal health aspects, clinical procedures and management, health planning and staff health issues. The key theme of the chapter is the development of minimum standards of care and the provision of specialized health services in accordance with the needs of the trafficking victim. The chapter focuses on service provision not only against the background of human rights, but also the public health interests of the countries of origin, of transit and of destination. The Mental Health Aspects of Trafficking in Human Beings: Set of Minimum Standards The Minimum Standards presented in that booklet, recognize the fact that a significant number of trafficked persons are traumatized by their experiences, and psychological scars often take much longer to heal than physical scars. These Minimum Standards aim to provide a guiding tool for all

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk types of organizations who are already acting or are intending to develop programs in the field of combating trafficking. Furthermore, the standards aim to help the implementation of comprehensive and coordinated psychosocial care of trafficked persons from the time of their rescue to throughout their reintegration process The Mental Health Aspects of Trafficking in Human Beings: Training Manual This training manual provides an overall framework of the trafficking process and examines the trafficked person’s as well as the provider’s perspective of the mental health issues associated with trafficking of people. Moreover, this Manual reviews the various assistance processes and structures currently in place and offers basic guidelines for their management, as well as innovative techniques of assessment and intervention. The final section equips service providers with tips on how to avoid burnout and remain professionally effective WGBH & Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health: The Modern Slave Trade: Public Health Impacts In this Forum, anti-trafficking and human rights experts convened to discuss the public health implications of the shadowy world of trafficking. What drives and sustains the industry? How are governments, NGOs, and other agencies fighting trafficking in their communities, including in the U.S.? What interventions work? And why is this issue so important to public health? Moderator: Phillip Martin; Senior Investigative Reporter, WGBH, and Former National Race and Culture Reporter, NPR; Jacqueline Bhabha; Dan Vexler; Jocelyn Kelly; Martina Vandenberg WHO Guidelines for Interviewing Trafficked Women The World Health Organization created a comprehensive handbook of guiding principles for interviewing trafficked women, entitled “WHO Ethical and Safety Recommendations for Interviewing Trafficked Women.”

DLU 9/27/19 Laurie Dunn-Ryznyk