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By Cash S | June 18th 2007 11:00 AM | 9 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
In California, you can't smoke a cigar in Morton's Of Chicago after a great steak any more. It's too dangerous to the health of the waitresses and waiters. Legislators have recently tried to institute carseats practically until children are teenagers because of concerns about their safety.

Yet some adult film performers are put at risk of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases because their employers prohibit the use of condoms.

If employers won't protect them, is it time to regulate the porn industry?

The San Fernando Valley in California generates about $1 billion annually in revenue. Nationwide, porn revenues are in the neighborhood of $12 billion. That's a lot of money to be unregulated but nothing like the $51 billion in revenue for food and beverage peddlers just in California. Still, the issue is worker safety. Because the industry is unregulated there is no firm number on how many workers in the porn industry actually have sex, but total employment is around 6,000 in the state.

So how many is enough to worry about?

The heterosexual adult film industry attempts to control the spread of sexual transmitted diseases by periodically conducting STD tests among performers. However, transmission can still occur. In 2004, for example, a male performer who had tested HIV negative only three days earlier infected three of 14 female performers.

How often should testing be done? Every day? What, in our considerable experience watching governments be inefficent, suggests that they will be error free simply because they regulate it?

The adult film industry itself, say Drs Grudzen and Kerndt in a PLOS report (1), lacks the "will or ability" to regulate itself, and needs state and federal legislation to enforce health and safety standards for adult film performers.

Since condoms are 90-95% effective at preventing HIV transmission, use should be mandated for all films, say the authors, and legislators could look to Nevada for a model for the successful regulation of a legal sex-related industry. Since the institution of mandatory condoms in Nevada's brothels in 1988, not a single sex worker has contracted HIV.

"Short of legislation mandating performer protection, restricting distribution of adult movies to condom-only films may be the one way to have an impact on the industry," they say. "If there were organized and truly effective advocacy for performers, then large hotel chains, video retailers, and cable networks could be pressured to purchase adult films under a condom-only 'seal of approval.'"

This doesn't seem like a practical solution. Forcing an industry to make a product customers don't want so that the unemployed people who used to work in the industry can feel safe sounds like a government solution.

At some point we have to achieve a minimum threshold on who and what we can regulate. An industry with at most a few hundred performers placing themselves at risk can't be regulated effectively and attempting to do so would drive the industry even farther underground where performers would be placed at even greater risk.

(1) Grudzen CR, Kerndt PR (2007) The adult film industry: Time to regulate? PLoS Med 4(6): e126.

Comments

Gosh buddy, it sounds as if you have way too much time on your hands...either get a life or do something that is truly worthwhile...

Cash's picture
It depends on your perspective. The health of porn stars may not be a worthwhile topic for you ( or anyone else here, really, we'll have to see ) but it's difficult as a civilized society to say X group of people deserve a healthy environment by government mandate but Y group does not, simply because you happen not to like them.

I would never eat at a Fresh Choice but I wouldn't say it's okay to smoke in one and kill the waitresses, but not okay in IHOP because I happen to like it more.

X group of people deserve a healthy environment by government mandate but Y group does not
This is true but still quite common. I've noticed few examples too like should waitress be protecded from the smoke in restaurants? Is it OK for soldiers to become deaf?

Hank's picture
Soldiers have hazards of the occupation, as do tree loggers and construction workers. Porn stars do not. Most people seemed to focus on whether or not this is an endorsement of porn stars. It isn't. It is very much an objection to governments mandating legislation and then hiring more people to enforce it, all of which costs taxpayers money.

I don't think we should regulate them anymore then other movie industries, theirs no need for MPAA ratings we know they are all rated XXX. Make sure everyone is of age and what else would be needed to regulate? They should all be testing them selves weekly for STDs/AIDs etc thats something they should do on their own. Not because the gov told them to. We should just legalize prostitution it's legal almost everywhere else and in some places hookers pay taxes to the gov and actually have to prove they got tested every so often.

I agree most London Escorts are tested, it is of their best interest to do so on a regular basis. Girls that appear in Porn most often move on to escorting, they are of the correct age and so are the punters.

I don't think we should regulate the Porn Industry at all.

I agree most London Escorts Directory are tested, it is of their best interest to do so on a regular basis. Girls that appear in Porn most often move on to escorting, they are of the correct age and so are the punters.

Yes I agree with Alex 100%

I guess it depends.........If you are talking about escorts offering the type of services outlined in the links above with multiple one hour incall bookings seeing numerous clients every week for unprotected services, then we certainly should have regulation, licensing and testing. However, there is a higher level where perhaps things are a little more civilized.

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