Frontiers in Psychiatry,
Journal Year:
2022,
Volume and Issue:
13
Published: June 2, 2022
Parental
addiction
can
result
in
harm
to
children
and
removal
of
by
the
Local
Authority.
Less
is
known
about
impact
on
their
parents
whether
gender
has
a
role
this
process.Data
736
service
users
were
obtained
from
caseloads
8
nurses
12
social
care
workers
an
Alcohol
Drug
Recovery
Service
Scotland.
Gender
differences
prevalence/patterns
child
removal,
associations
between
parental
factors
relationship
suicidality
examined.Mothers
more
likely
have
had
one
or
removed
compared
fathers
(56.6
vs.
17.7%;
p
<
0.001)
series
individual
removals
(22.5
4.3%;
=
0.014).
In
addition
female
gender,
younger
age,
drug
use,
mental
health
suicide
attempts
also
associated
with
removal.
Mothers
who
women
not
mothers
made
attempt
end
lives
than
but
them
removed.Gender
apparent
prevalence
patterns
six
times
fathers.
Child
occurred
alongside
other
risk
suggesting
that
families
need
holistic
support
for
multiple
areas
need.
Services
should
be
aware
link
provide
additional
during
after
Housing Theory and Society,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
41(3), P. 379 - 396
Published: March 31, 2024
The
article
is
concerned
with
the
emotional
effects
of
homelessness
on
women
who
are
mothers.
It
develops
a
multi-disciplinary
conceptualization
"haunting"
to
bring
understanding
ongoing
grief
and
trauma
associated
losing
home
children.
explores
how
women's
embodied
affective
experiences
not
just
responses
deeply
distressing
events,
but
inextricably
intertwined
unfurling
housing
child
protection
policies,
sometimes
long
after
policy
decision
(eviction,
removal).
Drawing
biographical
research
26
women,
contributes
new
insights
into
both
our
limited
also
scholarly
work
that
recognizes
diffuse
power
social
its
harms.
advances
novel
lived
experience
by
conceptualizing
empirically
investigating
decisions
as
hauntings
permeate
past,
present
anticipated
futures.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
20(12), P. 6162 - 6162
Published: June 17, 2023
Child
removals
are
increasing
in
England
and
Wales.
Family
court
involvement
is
particularly
common
among
women
with
multiple
disadvantages,
the
rates
higher
economically
marginalised
areas.
This
article
aims
to
explore
women’s
narratives
of
child
removal
within
life
stories
homelessness
examines
how
stigma,
power
State
surveillance
manifest
their
experiences.
Data
drawn
from
qualitative
interviews
14
mothers
north-east
who
had
experienced
children
through
family
courts
explored
wider
context
a
neoliberal
political
agenda
“troubled
families”,
particular,
“deviant
mothers”.
The
participants
describe
stigma
structured
interactions
social
services.
Despite
known
poor
outcomes
associated
for
both
children,
professional
often
tapers
off
afterwards,
little
support
mothers.
Drawing
on
accounts,
we
seek
illuminate
experiences
enhance
our
understanding
plays
out
statutory
settings,
further
entrenching
exclusion
ultimately
health
inequalities.
Drugs Education Prevention and Policy,
Journal Year:
2020,
Volume and Issue:
28(5), P. 454 - 464
Published: Dec. 16, 2020
Recovery
is
now
the
defining
feature
of
UK
drug
and
alcohol
policy.
Despite
this
policy
emphasis,
little
attention
has
been
paid
to
lived
experience
those
in
recovery.
Instead,
research
typically
concentrated
on
treatment
populations,
which
are
predominantly
male.
Consequently,
we
have
insight
into
recovery
experiences
general,
specifically
how
they
might
differ
for
females
males.
This
article
makes
an
important
contribution
through
offering
a
unique
addiction/recovery
pathways
342
female
410
male
participants
using
data
gathered
via
Life
survey.
Participants
were
recruited
social
media
groups.
Bivariate
analyses
used
explore
gender
differences
relation
personal
characteristics,
addiction
(self-defined),
well-being,
family
life.
These
suggest
that
greater
proportion
report
having
specific
needs
mental
health
relationships
with
children
or
partners
whilst
males
disclosed
physical
health.
Whilst
findings
reflect
importance
ongoing
support
everyone
recovery,
also
need
provide
gender-responsive
support.
The British Journal of Social Work,
Journal Year:
2021,
Volume and Issue:
52(4), P. 1988 - 2007
Published: May 26, 2021
Abstract
Having
a
secure,
safe
and
affordable
home
is
an
essential
element
in
the
experience
of
‘good
enough’
childhood.
This
not
available
to
large
growing
number
children
parents
UK
because
structural
housing
crisis
affecting
availability,
quality,
affordability
regulation
accommodation.
There
clear
body
evidence
which
demonstrates
negative
effects
poor
homelessness
on
children’s
health
development.
A
much
smaller
work
implicates
policies
conditions
child
abuse
neglect,
but
there
profound
lack
good
quality
data
or
research
about
role
play
shaping
demand
for
social
care
UK.
article
reviews
evidence,
identifying
limitations
gaps.
Its
aim
open
up
policy
practice
conversations
increasing
significance
as
critical
issue
whilst
making
case
urgent
agenda.
Frontiers in Psychiatry,
Journal Year:
2022,
Volume and Issue:
13
Published: June 2, 2022
Parental
addiction
can
result
in
harm
to
children
and
removal
of
by
the
Local
Authority.
Less
is
known
about
impact
on
their
parents
whether
gender
has
a
role
this
process.Data
736
service
users
were
obtained
from
caseloads
8
nurses
12
social
care
workers
an
Alcohol
Drug
Recovery
Service
Scotland.
Gender
differences
prevalence/patterns
child
removal,
associations
between
parental
factors
relationship
suicidality
examined.Mothers
more
likely
have
had
one
or
removed
compared
fathers
(56.6
vs.
17.7%;
p
<
0.001)
series
individual
removals
(22.5
4.3%;
=
0.014).
In
addition
female
gender,
younger
age,
drug
use,
mental
health
suicide
attempts
also
associated
with
removal.
Mothers
who
women
not
mothers
made
attempt
end
lives
than
but
them
removed.Gender
apparent
prevalence
patterns
six
times
fathers.
Child
occurred
alongside
other
risk
suggesting
that
families
need
holistic
support
for
multiple
areas
need.
Services
should
be
aware
link
provide
additional
during
after