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Dive into the research topics where Emma Ward is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Emma Ward.


Child & Family Social Work | 2017

Risk, resilience and identity construction in the life narratives of young people leaving residential care

Gillian Schofield; Birgit Larsson; Emma Ward

The role of residential care for children has developed very differently internationally, but in all cultural contexts there are questions about the extent to which it can help young people recover from high risk backgrounds. In the UK, residential care has come to be seen as the placement of last resort, yet new government guidance on permanence has suggested that residential care can provide security and a sense of belonging. Narrative analysis of interviews with 20 care leavers identified their different pathways from birth families through residential care to early adulthood. Some experienced a transformation from a negative sense of self as victims or ‘bad children’ to survivors, while others continued to struggle. Key to successful turning points were four interacting factors, all associated with resilience; connection, agency, activity and coherence. These narratives revealed the importance of nurturing relationships and a sense of ‘family’, but also the role of support after leaving residential care, when transitions workers helped them to move on but stay connected. The study highlighted how residential care leavers from adverse backgrounds attribute very different meanings to their experiences, which affects identity construction, resilience and the need for support.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2018

A qualitative exploration of the role of vape shop environments in supporting smoking abstinence.

Emma Ward; Sharon Cox; Lynne Dawkins; Sarah Jakes; Richard Holland; Caitlin Notley

E-cigarettes are the most popular method of quitting smoking in England and most are purchased in specialist vape shops. This qualitative study explores how the vape shop environment is experienced by quitters to support smoking abstinence. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted to elicit experiences of e-cigarette use, including experiences of vape shops, in 40 people who had used e-cigarettes in a quit attempt. Observations of six shops in a range of locations were also undertaken. Interview and observation data were analysed using inductive thematic analysis and triangulated. At an individual level, smoking abstinence was supported through shop assistants’ attempts to understand customers’ smoking preferences in order to: (i) tailor advice about the most appropriate product; and (ii) offer an ongoing point of contact for practical help. At an interpersonal level, shops offered opportunity to socialise and reinforce a vaping identity, although the environment was perceived as intimidating for some (e.g., new and female users). At a structural level, shops ensured easy access to products perceived to be good value by customers and had adapted to legislative changes. Vape shops can provide effective behavioural support to quitters to maintain smoking abstinence. Health professionals could capitalise on this through partnership working with shops, to ensure best outcomes for clients wanting to use e-cigarettes to quit smoking.


Harm Reduction Journal | 2018

The unique contribution of e-cigarettes for tobacco harm reduction in supporting smoking relapse prevention

Caitlin Notley; Emma Ward; Lynne Dawkins; Richard Holland

BackgroundWe have little understanding of how vapers use e-cigarettes beyond cessation. E-cigarettes may have a role to play in reducing the health-related harms of tobacco smoking, through not only assisting smoking cessation attempts but also supporting long-term abstinence from smoking. However, there are fears that vaping may lead to the ‘renormalisation’ of smoking type behaviours. This study aimed to explore patterns of use and reported experiences of vapers quitting smoking using an e-cigarette in relation to long-term smoking status (abstinence or relapse).MethodsA purposive sample of 40 UK vapers was matched to a sampling frame of demographic characteristics from a representative sample of UK quitters. Following full informed consent, semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted. Data were thematically analysed by two members of the research team. Final thematic analysis was verified and agreed by consensus.ResultsThe sample self-reported long histories of tobacco use and multiple previous quit attempts which had eventually resulted in relapse back to smoking, although a small but important group had never before attempted to quit. Initiating e-cigarette use was experienced as a revelation for some, who were quickly able to fully switch to using e-cigarettes as an alternative to tobacco smoking. For others, periods of dual use or smoking relapse combined with attempts at vaping that were not initially satisfactory. Many of these chose a cheaper ‘cig-a-like’ device which they found to be inadequate. Experimentation with different devices and different setups, over time, resulted in some ‘sliding’ rather than switching to vaping. This involved periods of ‘dual use’. Some settled on patterns of vaping as a direct substitute of previous tobacco smoking, whereas others reported ‘grazing’ patterns of vaping throughout the day that were perceived to support tobacco smoking abstinence.ConclusionsOur data demonstrates that e-cigarettes may be a unique harm reduction innovation for smoking relapse prevention. E-cigarettes meet the needs of some ex-smokers by substituting physical, psychological, social, cultural and identity-related aspects of tobacco addiction. Some vapers reported that they found vaping pleasurable and enjoyable—being more than a substitute but actually preferred, over time, to tobacco smoking. This clearly suggests that vaping is a viable long-term substitute for smoking, with substantial implications for tobacco harm reduction.


British Journal of Social Work | 2011

Managing Loss and a Threatened Identity: Experiences of Parents of Children Growing Up in Foster Care, the Perspectives of their Social Workers and Implications for Practice

Gillian Schofield; Bente Moldestad; Ingrid Höjer; Emma Ward; Dag Skilbred; Julie Young; Toril Havik


Children and Youth Services Review | 2012

Part of the family: Planning for permanence in long-term family foster care

Gillian Schofield; Mary Beek; Emma Ward


Archive | 2012

Looked after children and offending: Reducing risk and promoting resilience

Gillian Schofield; Emma Ward; Laura Biggart; Victoria Scaife; Jane Dodsworth; Birgit Larsson; Alice Haynes; Nigel Stone


Child & Family Social Work | 2013

Professional foster carer and committed parent: role conflict and role enrichment at the interface between work and family in long‐term foster care

Gillian Schofield; Mary Beek; Emma Ward; Laura Biggart


Archive | 2011

Understanding and working with parents of children in long-term foster care

Gillian Schofield; Emma Ward


Children and Youth Services Review | 2015

Looked after children and offending: An exploration of risk, resilience and the role of social cognition

Gillian Schofield; Laura Biggart; Emma Ward; Birgit Larsson


Archive | 2015

Contact after Adoption:A longitudinal study of post adoption contact arrangements

Elsbeth Neil; Mary Beek; Emma Ward

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Mary Beek

University of East Anglia

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Birgit Larsson

University of East Anglia

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Caitlin Notley

University of East Anglia

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Laura Biggart

University of East Anglia

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Lynne Dawkins

London South Bank University

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Richard Holland

University of East Anglia

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Debra Griffiths

University of East Anglia

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Elsbeth Neil

University of East Anglia

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