Screening
Tips For Victims of Human Trafficking
Courtesy of U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services
www.acf.hhs.gov/trafficking/
The following are sample questions health care and other social
service providers can ask in screening an individual to determine
if he/she is a potential victim of human trafficking. As with
domestic violence victims, if you think a person is a victim of
trafficking, you do not want to begin by asking directly if the
person has been beaten or held against his/her will. Instead,
you want to start at the edges of his/her experience. And if possible,
you should enlist the help of a staff member who speaks the patient’s
language and understands the patient’s culture, keeping in mind
that any questioning should be done confidentially.
You
should screen interpreters to ensure they do not know the victim
or the traffickers and do not otherwise have a conflict of interest.
Before
you ask the person any sensitive questions, try to get the person
alone if they came to you accompanied by someone who could be
a trafficker posing as a spouse, other family member or employer.
However, when requesting time alone, you should do so in a manner
that does not raise suspicions.
Suggested
Screening Questions:
Can you leave your job or situation if you want?
Can you come and go as you please?
Have you been threatened if you try to leave?
Have you been physically harmed in any way?
What are your working or living conditions like?
Where do you sleep and eat?
Do you sleep in a bed, on a cot or on the floor?
Have you ever been deprived of food, water, sleep or medical care?
Do you have to ask permission to eat, sleep or go to the bathroom?
Are there locks on your doors and windows so you cannot get out?
Has anyone threatened your family?
Has your identification or documentation been taken from you?
Is anyone forcing you to do anything that you do not want to do?
If you
think you have come in contact with a victim of human trafficking
in the Pinellas, Pasco or Hillsborough County area, call the CATF
Hotline at (727) 562-4917; other areas contact the Trafficking
Information and Referral Hotline at 1-888-373-7888. These hotlines
will help you determine if you have encountered victims of human
trafficking, will identify local resources available in your community
to help victims, and will help you coordinate with local social
service organizations to help protect and serve victims so they
can begin the process of restoring their lives. For more information
on human trafficking visit the links page.