Human Trafficking Overview

What is human trafficking? Human trafficking is a modern form of slavery. Victims are subjected to force, fraud or coercion for the purpose of commercial sex or forced labor. Victims are children, teenagers, women and men.

Catholic and other health care organizations and their health care professionals can help victims of human trafficking by being alert to the problem and realizing patients they are treating may be victims.
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If you think someone is a victim of human trafficking, call the Trafficking Information and Referral Hotline: (888) 373-7888.

Upcoming Events


On-Demand Webinar Recordings


Human Trafficking Prayers


CHA Resources

Developed to raise awareness, CHA has developed a flyer on the chocolate trade as well as general awareness posters — FREE for CHA members!

Faithfully United Against Human TraffickingFaithfully United Against Human Trafficking
Download a copy:
8.5x11 (English)
8.5x11 (Spanish)
11x17 (English)
11x17 (Spanish)

Order copies (free posters and free shipping!)

 

Recoginize the Face of Human TraffickingRecognize the Face of Human Trafficking
Download a copy:
8.5x11 (English)
8.5x11 (Spanish)
11x17 (English)
11x17 (Spanish)

Order copies (free posters and free shipping!)

 

Recognize the Face Image A - Human Trafficking 4768 -200Recognize the Face of Human Trafficking Image A
Download a copy:
8.5x11 (English)
8.5x11 (Spanish)
11x17 (English)
11x17 (Spanish)

Order copies (free posters and free shipping!)

 

Recognize the Face Image B - Human Trafficking 4776 -200Recognize the Face of Human Trafficking Image B
Download a copy:
8.5x11 (English)
8.5x11 (Spanish)
11x17 (English)
11x17 (Spanish)

Order copies (free posters and free shipping!)

 

Recognize the Face Image C - Human Trafficking 4783 -200Recognize the Face of Human Trafficking Image C
Download a copy:
8.5x11 (English)
8.5x11 (Spanish)
11x17 (English)
11x17 (Spanish)

Order copies (free posters and free shipping!)

 

Recognize the Face Image D - Human Trafficking 4790 -200Recognize the Face of Human Trafficking Image D
Download a copy:
8.5x11 (English)
8.5x11 (Spanish)
11x17 (English)
11x17 (Spanish)

Order copies (free posters and free shipping!)

 

Easter-Themed Card about Cocoa TradeHuman Trafficking Initiative — Easter-Themed Flyer about the Cocoa Trade
» Download a flyer
» Order copies of the flyer
» Order copies of a card

 

Prayers

A prayer about human trafficking (Sisters of Christian Charity, Eastern Province, USA)

A prayer to end human Trafficking (Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth, Convent Station, N.J.)


Prayers

A prayer about human trafficking (Sisters of Christian Charity, Eastern Province, USA)

A prayer to end human Trafficking (Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth, Convent Station, N.J.)


Prayers

A prayer about human trafficking (Sisters of Christian Charity, Eastern Province, USA)

A prayer to end human Trafficking (Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth, Convent Station, N.J.)


Human Trafficking Educator Honored at 2019 Assembly

Holly Austin Gibbs, director, Human Trafficking Response Program, Dignity Health, San Francisco, a member of CommonSpirit Health, received the Sister Concilia Moran Award for demonstrated creativity and breakthrough thinking.
Read the Catholic Health World article
Watch the video


ST. JOSEPHINE BAKHITA
Promote and Defend Human Dignity
Download the PDF
St. Josephine Bakhita is the patroness of trafficking survivors.



CommonSpirit Resources

Community-based Violence Prevention Resource Guide and Model

PEARR Tool, 2021 Shared Learnings Manual Video highlighting CommonSpirit Health’s initiative to identify and support victims of violence and human trafficking.

CHA Podcast: Catholics Against Human Trafficking


 

News & Notes

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Please Share on Social Media!

Please use the hashtag #humantrafficking as well as #CatholicHealth as you share your important work to combat human trafficking and serve those who are victims.
View and download our social media resources

Sign Up for Updates

Sign up to receive email updates regarding the Catholic Campaign Against Human Trafficking.

Pope Francis Decries Human Trafficking

In July 2018, Pope Francis urged all people to combat the “shameful crime” of human trafficking. During remark in St. Peter’s Square, Francis decried that many adults and children are trafficked into slavery for forced labor, sex businesses, organ trafficking, begging rackets and other criminal activities.
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Alert health providers can break chain of human trafficking

Mar 15, 2013, 01:00 AM
Asked who might benefit from an informational session on human trafficking at this year's Catholic Health Assembly in Anaheim, Calif., Roy Ahn replied, "I can't think of anyone who wouldn't benefit."
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By NANCY FRAZIER O'BRIEN

Asked who might benefit from an informational session on human trafficking at this year's Catholic Health Assembly in Anaheim, Calif., Roy Ahn replied, "I can't think of anyone who wouldn't benefit."

Ahn, associate director in the Division of Global Health and Human Rights in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, will present an Innovation Forum session on "Human Trafficking and the Health Care Provider" at CHA's annual gathering June 2-4. He will be joined by Sr. Catherine O'Connor, CSB, vice president for mission and sponsorship at Covenant Health Systems in Tewksbury, Mass.

"A lot of human trafficking goes undetected in the health care setting," said Ahn. "There are a lot of missed opportunities" to intervene and alert authorities.

He described human trafficking — which can include sex trafficking, forced labor, debt bondage or unlawful recruitment — as an "emerging public health problem" in the United States. Emergency departments, Ahn said, are "a big safety net for every community's most vulnerable populations," including those who are victims of trafficking.

Ahn believes clinicians — and especially those in emergency medicine — are on the front lines of identifying and assisting victims of human trafficking.

They can help, he said, "in terms of identifying people who are in trafficking situations; treating victims who need medical care, both physical and mental; referring them to other legal and social services; and preventing human trafficking."

Ahn and Sr. O'Connor will provide tips on how to identify and assist victims of trafficking. The U.S. Department of State offers a list of potential red flags:

  • The person lives with his or her employer or with multiple people in a cramped area.
  • The employer holds the worker's identity documents.
  • The individual is prevented from speaking with health care providers alone.
  • Answers seem rehearsed or scripted, and the person seems submissive or fearful.
  • There are signs of physical abuse.

When a health provider suspects a patient may be a victim of human trafficking, the State Department suggests asking more questions including:

  • Can you leave your job if you want to?
  • Have you or your family been threatened?
  • Are you in debt to your employer?

The State Department urges people to inform authorities when there is reason to believe an individual is being held through coercion or force. The department recommends calling local law enforcement, the National Human Trafficking Resource Center at (888) 373-7888 or the U.S. Department of Justice's National Worker Exploitation Complaint Line at (888) 428-7581.

Sr. O'Connor has been involved in the fight against trafficking both through her religious order, the Congregation of St. Brigid, and through her employer, Covenant Health Systems.

The congregation is a member of UNANIMA International, a nongovernmental organization made up of 17 religious congregations with 17,500 members in 72 countries. It works on trafficking and other issues, primarily through the United Nations.

Although the congregations work to assist trafficking victims globally, and to educate and influence policy makers, their U.S. members were "shocked to find out it's in our own neighborhoods," Sr. O'Connor said.

It's important to continue to raise public awareness about the buying and selling of people in the U.S. and elsewhere, she said, because victims can blend in, in open sight. "Amtrak is doing training now to help employees recognize passengers who may be trafficked," Sr. O'Connor said. "There is a dawning consciousness about human trafficking."

The International Labour Organization recently estimated that nearly 21 million people — or 3 out of every 1,000 people in the world — are victims of forced labor, "trapped in jobs which they were coerced or deceived into and which they cannot leave." More than a quarter of them are under the age of 18, the organization says.

The bulk of the victims are in the Asia-Pacific region, where 11.7 million people are victims of forced labor.

The U.N. defines human trafficking as "the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion ... for the purpose of exploitation." The international agency puts the number of people who are trafficked both within and outside their countries at 4 million annually, and says that 80 percent of them are female and half are children.

St. Mary's Regional Medical Center in Lewiston, Maine — a member of Covenant Health Systems — has cosponsored two conferences on human trafficking. The 2012 conference, titled "Not Here: A Call to Action Against Human Trafficking," included specialty tracks for health care professionals, law enforcement, social service agencies, faith-based organizations and community members.

"I find it difficult to even read some of the materials" about human trafficking, Sr. O'Connor admitted. But she said her faith obliges her to do everything she can to "care for the poor and vulnerable," a category that definitely includes victims of the slave trade.

There are signs of progress. Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick signed an anti-trafficking law in 2011 that includes mandatory minimum terms of five years and penalties that could reach life in prison and fines of up to $1 million for those who traffic others for sex or forced labor.

Efforts to pass similar laws are ongoing in other states, Sr. O'Connor said.

"We have a moral obligation to look at an issue that is so hideous," Ahn said. "As human beings we feel morally obligated to do something about this" in order to "identify people who are in trouble and have tools at the ready to assist them."

 

Copyright © 2013 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States
For reprint permission, contact Betty Crosby or call (314) 253-3477.

Categories:
  • Mission
  • Human Trafficking
  • Focus Areas
Authors:
  • Nancy Frazier O'Brien
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If you think someone is a victim of human trafficking, call the Trafficking Information and Referral Hotline: (888) 373-7888.