REHABILITATION AND LONG-TERM MENTAL HEALTH SUPPORT FOR SURVIVORS OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING
CLINICAL AND POLICY PERSPECTIVES
Keywords:
Human Trafficking, Rehabilitation, Mental Health, Trauma-Informed Care, Social ReintegrationAbstract
Human trafficking inflicts enduring psychological, social, and economic harms that outlast rescue. While prevention and prosecution have advanced, the field still underinvests in the survivor’s long-term rehabilitation needs. This paper synthesizes evidence on post-trauma sequelae: PTSD, depression, anxiety, and complex trauma, and evaluates clinical and community models that support sustained recovery. We advocate for trauma-informed, culturally embedded, and survivor centered frameworks that extend beyond short-term care to encompass economic empowerment, housing stability, and social reintegration. Drawing on case illustrations from across Africa, Europe, and Asia, we identify convergent practice elements, including evidence-based therapies (e.g., CBT, EMDR), survivor-led peer networks, and context-specific supports (such as faith-based and indigenous practices). Policy analysis reveals a persistent gap between legal commitments and the provision of funded, durable services. Our central recommendation is to enshrine rehabilitation as a legal right with dedicated financing, survivor co-design in policy processes, and accountability metrics, leveraging the momentum of the 2025 Palermo context and the proposed Sicily Declaration. Rehabilitation is not ancillary to justice; it is its test, ensuring survivors are not merely rescued, but restored to safety, dignity, and opportunity.