2018
DOI: 10.1108/jcs-06-2017-0026
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Pursuing the adoption pathway: the lived experiences of people living with HIV

Abstract: Pursuing the adoption pathway: The lived experiences of people living with HIV This exploratory study of 7 participants including individuals and couples, examined the challenges that people with HIV faced as they navigated through the intricate processes of trying to access adoption services in the south of England. In this Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) study, some participants described positive experiences with social workers. However, this was in the minority. Lack of information, inadequa… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The BRAC 2 eD model is a new framework proposed following some reflections on this author’s own work around anti-racist practice, HIV and adoption, direct practice and social work education (Cane, 2020; Cane, Vydellingum and Knibb, 2018). It is presented as a tool that can be used to support social workers’ decision-making processes when working with prospective adopters from minoritised ethnic backgrounds.…”
Section: The Brac2ed Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The BRAC 2 eD model is a new framework proposed following some reflections on this author’s own work around anti-racist practice, HIV and adoption, direct practice and social work education (Cane, 2020; Cane, Vydellingum and Knibb, 2018). It is presented as a tool that can be used to support social workers’ decision-making processes when working with prospective adopters from minoritised ethnic backgrounds.…”
Section: The Brac2ed Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However it is important for social workers to be confident that they have assessed all requirements in line with the guidelines and to avoid developing further subjective unwritten rules and creating barriers that are biased, not aligned to proportionate decisions or to the best outcomes for children needing permanency. It is possible that there may be personality clashes, and social workers may feel threatened by the social status of the people they are assessing; in many ways, this may result in over-scrutiny, unreasonable interfering, skewed judgements and possible punitive decisions (Cane, Vydellingum and Knibb, 2018).…”
Section: The Brac2ed Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This allows them to rebuild their resources and pursue parenting. People living with HIV tend to return to specialist support services where they receive group, peer support or specialist reproductive counselling or advocacy services, demonstrating that they can endure challenging and complex systems with optimism (Cane, et al., 2018). It is expected that by the time they approach adoption services, they are positive about the assessment process and its intrusive nature.…”
Section: Individual Strengthsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A small number of researchers have begun to examine social work practice with regard to people living with HIV who wish to adopt children (Cane, 2017; Cane, Vydellingum and Knibb, 2018; Underhill, et al., 2016). In the UK, this author (Cane, 2017) explored how this particular group perceived the quality of inter-professional collaboration between adoption assessors and their specialist HIV clinicians or support workers from the HIV voluntary sector.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%