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Journal Article

Citation

Bell L, Lewis-Brooke S, Herring R, Lehane L, O'Farrell-Pearce S. Br. J. Soc. Work 2021; 51(6): 2019-2037.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/bjsw/bcaa138

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This article focuses on interviews with 'birth mothers' who experienced successive losses of their children to public care in one local area of London, England. Interviews were conducted during a project partnership between a London borough and university staff, aiming to provide a localised, pilot support initiative which responded to mothers' viewpoints. To 'hear' mothers' own voices more clearly, we analysed interview transcripts using a methodology which separates out elements of how the interviewee tells her story, how she speaks about herself and about her relationships, taking into account surrounding social complexities and researchers' reactions to the story. To explain how professionals could subsequently draw upon these 'mothers' voices' for a pilot support initiative, we identify some 'key messages for professionals' from these interviews, including women wanting clear and honest communication between themselves and workers, and between staff; women often feeling 'let down' by professional procedures and court processes that were moving too fast for them to keep up; and women wanting to be treated with more respect. Women respected some professionals but not others and this seemed to relate partly to personalities. Some mothers experienced being 'left alone' or 'abandoned' to deal with the aftermath of children's removal and/or adoption.

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