Abstract
Mutual aid is the practice of grassroots support based on principles of direct action and non-hierarchical cooperation, central to the health and well-being of marginalized communities including sex workers. Despite mutual aid's centrality to sex workers' well-being, there is a dearth of health research on sex workers' uptake of mutual aid, particularly digital modes, and its relationship to supportive occupational conditions. Drawing on longitudinal cohort data, we measured recent mutual aid and its association with structural and occupational conditions among 900+ sex workers in Metro Vancouver, Canada. Informed by mutual aid principles and a structural determinants framework, we examined uptake of "digital" and "on-the-ground" (i.e., in-person) mutual aid and explored associations with occupational conditions in a community-based cohort of sex workers over four years (2020-24). Among 367 sex workers, 37.2 % and 58 % reported engaging in digital and on-the-ground mutual aid, respectively. We found higher odds of utilizing "on-the-ground" mutual aid among those experiencing recent physical/sexual violence and lower odds of digital mutual aid among sex workers who experienced lifetime incarceration. The findings affirm engagement with mutual aid as a critical support model for sex workers, while highlighting barriers to emerging digital modalities. There is need for full decriminalization of sex work and the democratization of digital tools to reduce barriers to essential resources and support networks. Further, our findings underscore the potential of mutual aid principles within public health, by learning from communities who have cultivated grassroots models of care in the context of structural exclusion.