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Human and Health Sciences

Prof. Eric Blyth

Professor of Social Work

Staff photo
Room: HHR1/14
Telephone Extension: 2457
Direct Telephone:
+44 (0) 1484 472457
E-mail: e.d.blyth@hud.ac.uk
Qualifications: 1971 BA (Upper 2nd Class Hons) (Sociology) - University of York; 1974 MA (Applied Social Studies) - Brunel University; 1974 Certificate of Qualification in Social Work - Central Council for Education and Training in Social Work; 2002 PhD - University of Huddersfield

General Biography

  • 1971-1975 Social Worker, Kent County Council
  • 1975-1978 Senior Social Worker, Kent County Council
  • 1978-1979 Training Officer, Kent County Council
  • 1979-1983 Principal Social Worker, Kent County Council
  • 1983-1990 Senior Lecturer in Social Work, Huddersfield Polytechnic/Development Officer, Wakefield Metropolitan District Council
  • 1990-1993 Senior Lecturer in Social Work, Huddersfield Polytechnic (University)
  • 1994-1997 Principal Lecturer in Social Work, University of Huddersfield
  • 1997-2000 Reader in Social Work, University of Huddersfield
  • 2000-present Professor of Social Work, University of Huddersfield

  • Visiting Professor: Department of Social Work, Hong Kong Baptist University (2004-2005)
  • Visiting Professor: Department of Social Work and Social Policy, University of Hong Kong (2004-2006)
  • Adjunct Professor: John Dossetor Health Ethics Centre, University of Alberta (2005-2008)
  • Hon Member, Society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology (2006-2008)
  • Visiting Professor: Department of Applied Social Sciences, Hong Kong Polytechnic University (2008)
  • PhD external examiner: University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne; University of Lancaster; Keele University; University of Kent at Canterbury; University of Pretoria; University of York; University of KwaZulu Natal;
  • MPhil external examiner: University of Kent at Canterbury;

  • 2004-2010 Co-editor: British Journal of Social Work
  • Editor, Journal of Fertility Counselling (1998-2003)
  • International Editorial Advisor, China Journal of Social Work (2007-present)
  • International Editorial Advisor, International Social Work (2002-present)
  • Reviewer, Nuffield Foundation, NHS, Research Grants Council of Hong Kong;

  • Member: Association of Professors of Social Work
  • Member: British Association of Social Workers
  • Member: British Infertility Counselling Association
  • Member: British Fertility Society
  • Member: European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology
  • Member: American Society for Reproductive Medicine
  • Member, International Advisory Board, Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology (2007-present);
  • Advisor, Donor Conception Support Group of Australia and Infertility Connection, Edmonton (Canada);
  • Executive Committee Member, British Infertility Counselling Association (1998-2003);
  • Member, British Association of Social Workers Project Group on Assisted Reproduction (1986-present; chair since 2005; recently co-chair)
  • Member, International Organising Committee for 5th International Conference on Social Work and Health and Mental Health, Hong Kong (2006);
  • Rapporteur, ESRC;

Teaching & Academic Responsibilities

  • PhD Research supervision
  • Teaching on Research Processes and Methods in Applied Criminology and Law and Human Justice
  • Consultancy on writing for publications
  • Co-chair: School Research Ethics Panel;
  • Member: School Research Committee, School Research Degrees Committee

Research & Scholarship

  • Values and ethics in social work
  • Research methods
  • Research ethics
  • Infertility and assisted conception
  • Children’s welfare and children’s rights
  • Social work law

Completed:

  • Infertility treatment and the welfare of the child: the role of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority
  • Meeting the needs of infertile clients: an examination of the role of satellite infertility clinics
  • Experiences of an ‘egg sharing’ programme in the UK.
  • Experiences of surrogacy arrangements in the UK
  • Children of drug or alcohol users - experiences of care and support
  • Recruiting semen donors under an information sharing system: a study of donors’ views
  • Birth origins information in assisted conception - UK policy development

Current:

  • Sharing genetic origins information in families created following third party assisted conception
  • Psychosocial implications of oocyte donation using a known donor
  • Choosing egg sharing: egg share donors and informed consent
  • Compensation of gamete and embryo donors and surrogates in the EU: the impact of the EU Tissues and Cells Directive

PhD Supervisions

I am currently supervising 3 PhD students. Since I am employed part-time only I do not have capacity for any more PhD student supervisions

Publications, Conference Presentations

2009
  • Disclosing donor information: A new code of silence? BioNews 9 March 2009 http://www.bionews.org.uk/commentary.lasso?storyid=4233  (with Marilyn Crawshaw and Olga van den Akker)
  • The role of birth certificates in relation to access to biographical and genetic history in donor conception. International Journal of Children’s Rights 2009 17(2): 207-233 (with Lucy Frith, Caroline Jones and Jennifer Speirs
  • The professionalisation of social work in England. China Journal of Social Work (in press)
  • Donor-conceived people's access to genetic and biographical history: An analysis of provisions in different jurisdictions permitting disclosure of donor identity. International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family (with Lucy Frith) (in press)
  • Family building in donor conception: Parents’ experiences of sharing information. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology (with Darren Langdridge and Rhonda Harris) (in press)
  • Measuring the quality of peer-reviewed publications in social work: Impact factors - liberation or liability? Social Work Education (with Steven Shardlow, Karen Lyons, Helen Masson, Ian Shaw and Sue White (in press)
2008
  • Donor insemination and the dilemma of the “unknown father”. In Bockenheimer-Lucius, G., Thorn, P. and Wendehorst, C. (eds) Umwege zum eigenen Kind Ethische und rechtliche Herausforderungen an die Reproduktionsmedizin 30 Jahre nach Louise Brown. Göttingen: Universitätsverlag Göttingen pp 157-174 http://webdoc.sub.gwdg.de/univerlag/2008/gsm3_umwege.pdf
  • Donor conception and birth certificates - more steps in the right direction. BioNews 19 May 2008. http://www.bionews.org.uk/commentary.lasso?storyid=3840
  • 1988-2008: Twenty Years of BICA [British Infertility Counselling Association). Journal of Fertility Counselling 2008 15(1): 15-28
  • Think of a number, then double it’: playing a numbers game with donor conception? BioNews 24 November 2008 http://www.bionews.org.uk/commentary.lasso?storyid=4091 (with Marilyn Crawshaw)
  • Psychosocial issues in known egg donation: Considerations for infertility counselling. Journal of Fertility Counselling 2008 15(3): 40-52 (with Nina Martin)
  • Egg sharing – a practical and ethical option in IVF? Expert Review of Obstetrics & Gynecology 3(4): 465-473 (with Berenice Golding)
  • The UK’s gamete donor ‘crisis’ – a critical analysis. Critical Social Policy. 2008 28(1): 74-95 (with Lucy Frith)
  • Inequalities in Reproductive Health: What is the Challenge for Social Work and How Can it Respond? Journal of Social Work. 2008 8(3): 213–232
  • To Be or Not To Be? A Critical Appraisal of the Welfare of Children Conceived through New Reproductive Technologies. International Journal of Children’s Rights 2008 16: 1-17.
  • Welfare of the Child assessments in assisted conception: a social constructionist perspective. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology. 2008 26(1): 31 - 43 (with Viv Burr and Abigail Farrand)
  • Ethical objections to sex-selection for non-medical reasons. 2008 Reproductive BioMedicine Online 16 (Supplement 1): 41-45 (with Lucy Frith and Marilyn Crawshaw)
2007
  • Donor recruitment: is “tackiness” the answer? Commentary: BioNews, 399, 20 March 2007 (with Irene Ryll)
  • Der unbekannte Vater: Zum Problem der Samenspenderidentifizierung. [Donor insemination and the dilemma of the ‘unknown father’] Invited presentation at Kinderwunsch in Jahr 2007: Aktuelle Ethische Herausforderungen an die Reproduktionsmedizin Forum für Ethik in der Medizin Frankfurt Am Main. E. V. 16 March 2007
  • To Be or Not To Be:  A Critical Appraisal of the Welfare of Children Conceived through New Reproductive Technologies. Opening speech. International Conference: Nobody’s Child, Everybody’s Children. Malaspina University-College, Nanaimo BC, Canada, 24 May 2007.
  • Contemporary ethical issues in third party assisted conception. paper given at European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology Annual Meeting, Lyon 3 July 2007 (with Lucy Frith) Human Reproduction, 22 Supp 1, 0-123, i50.
  • Ethical and psychological aspects of egg sharing. Keynote paper at  European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology Annual Meeting, Ethics and Law Pre-Congress Symposium, Lyon 1 July 2007.
  • Infertility treatment and the welfare of the child. Commentary BioNews 421 21 August 2007
  • UK donor registries. Briefing paper for Donor Registry Exploratory Workshop. Washington DC. 12 October 2007
  • “If you muck about with a birth certificate, you are labelling a child as a second class person”: the politics of donor conception and birth registration. Keynote paper at Progress Educational Trust Annual Conference, London 1 November 2007.
  • Past semen donors’ views about the use of a voluntary contact register. Reproductive BioMedicine Online, 2007, 14, 4, 411-417 (with Marilyn Crawshaw and Ken Daniels).
  • UK gamete donors’ reflections on the removal of anonymity: Implications for recruitment. Human Reproduction. 2007, 22: 1675 – 1680. doi: 10.1093/humrep/dem061 (with Lucy Frith and Abigail Farrand)
  • Counselling and Surrogacy in Licensed Clinics in the UK. BICA Practice Guide Series. Sheffield: British Infertility Counselling Association, 2007 (ISBN 1 901 406407) (with Judith Baron and Ann Haigh)
  • Conceptions of welfare. In Horsey, K. and Biggs, H. (eds) Human Fertilisation and Embryology: Reproducing Regulation. London: Routledge-Cavendish, 2007, pp.17-45 (ISBN 978 1 84472 090 3)
2006
  • Implications of ‘donor-linking’ for donors, offspring, recipients and clinics: past, present and future. Paper given at Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility Unit, London Health Sciences Centre, Ontario, 21 April 2006.
  • Donor conception: international trends and practices in disclosure of genetic origins information. Paper given at Reproductive Biology Unit, Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto 25 April 2006.
  • Conception par don de gamète: tendances et pratiques internationales dans l’accès à l’information concernant les origines génétiques.[ Donor conception: International trends and practices in disclosure of genetic origins information] Keynote presentation at symposium organised by Association MAIA, Paris 29 April 2006.
  • Sex selection: reproductive autonomy and social responsibility. Keynote speech at annual meeting of the Society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology, University of Aston, Birmingham 13-15 September 2006.
  • Sperm donation: time to look forward, not back. Commentary: BioNews 377, 25 September. 2006 (French version: ‘ Don de sperme: il est temps de regarder devant, pas derrière’. Association MAIA. November 2006
  • “Fertility tourism” requires a social work response. The European Social Worker, 2006, 3, 2, 4.
  • Inequalities in reproductive health: what is the challenge for social work and how can it respond? Invited presentation at the 5th Social Work in Health and Mental Health International Conference, Living in Harmony: Promoting Creative Synergy in a Stressful World. Hong Kong 10-14 December 2006. [12 December ] Abstract P0668 in Hong Kong Council of Social Services (2006) Living in Harmony: Promoting Creative Synergy in a Stressful World: Book of Abstracts. p. 194.
  • Donor anonymity and secrecy versus openness concerning the genetic origins of the offspring: international perspectives. Jewish Medical Ethics, 2006, V, 2, 4-13. (ISSN 0793 2952)
  • Involving children in health and social research - ‘human becomings’ or ‘active beings’? Childhood, 2006, 13, 1, 29-48 (with Rachel Balen, Helen Calabretto, Claire Fraser, Chris Horrocks and Martin Manby).
  • Attitudes to and practices regarding sex selection in China. Prenatal Diagnosis, 2006, 26, 7, 610-613 (with Cecilia Chan and Celia Chan).
  • Global perspectives. In Covington, S. and Burns, L. H. (eds) Infertility Counseling: A Comprehensive Handbook for Clinicians. (2nd. Edn) New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006, pp. 544-557 (with Jean Haase) (ISBN 0 521 85363 X)
2005
  • Experiences of Children and Young People whose Parents use Drugs or Alcohol. Report to the NHS (with Martin Manby and Claire Fraser). January 2005.
  • ‘All I can remember is that I’ve always known …’ Young people’s experiences of early disclosure of donor conception. Human Fertilisation and Embryology Annual Conference, Royal College of Surgeons, London 15 March 2005.
  • The changing face of social work with children in England. Development of Social Work Education and Services in China: Overseas and Indigenous Experiences, Fu Dan University, Shanghai. 20 March 2005 (organised by Fu Dan University and the University of Hong Kong).
  • Profession and social policy implementation - dialogue between practice and policy. Plenary paper at conference organized by Taiwan Social Policy Society, Taipei,, Taiwan Unions of Licensed Social Workers, and the Department of Social Work, National Taiwan University. 23 May 2005. Public lecture
  • How might we best undertake research on donor-conceived persons’ views about their conception? Commentary: BioNews 31 May, 2005
  • Creating a life to save a life: Reflections on the conception of ‘saviour siblings’, Public lecture organized by the Centre on Behaviourial Health, Faculty of Social Science & the Medical Ethics Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Hong Kong. 2 June 2005.
  • Under pressure? negotiating relationships in known egg donation. Psychology of Women Section Conference (British Psychological Society) University of Huddersfield 6-8 July 2005 (with Nina Martin, Ruth Deery, and Chris Cameron).
  • Attitudes to and practices: sex selection in China, plenary paper at Special Non-Invasive Advances in Fetal and Neonatal Evaluation seminar: Policies and practices of sex selection: Anticipating the impact of early non-invasive testing. Royal College of Physicians London, 6 July 2005 (with Cecilia Chan, Celia Chan, Amy Chow, Paul Yip and X Song).
  • Experiences of children and young people whose parents use drugs or alcohol. Evaluation for Practice International Conference, University of Huddersfield 13-14 July 2005 (with Martin Manby and Claire Fraser).
  • The proposed new role of schools in children’s welfare in the UK. Public lecture at TPC Support Center, Osaka, 7 September 2005.
  • The challenges of removing donor anonymity in donor conception, Public lecture at Pediatrics Department, Keio University Hospital, Tokyo, 9 September 2005.
  • Follow-up of gamete donation families. Keynote paper at Serono Ovum Donation Symposium, Vantaa, Finland 30 September 2005
  • Is it possible to recruit gamete donors who are both altruistic and identifiable? paper given at American Society for Reproductive Medicine Annual Meeting, Montreal October 2005 (with Abigail Farrand and Lucy Frith) Fertility and Sterility84, Supp 1, S21. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2005.07.049 (abstract)
  • Psychosocial support in known egg donation, paper given at American Society for Reproductive Medicine Annual Meeting, Montreal October 2005 (with Nina Martin, Chris Cameron, and Ruth Deery). Fertility and Sterility, 84, Supp 1, S21-S22. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert. 2005.07.050 (abstract)
  • Meeting the challenges posed by the abolition of donor anonymity. Keynote presentation at symposium ‘The future of donor conception: where do we go from here?’ organised by The Infertility Network, The Michener Institute. Toronto, 22-23 October 2005.
  • Assurances of past donor anonymity are meaningless. Commentary: BioNews 334, 14 November 2005
  • Donor anonymity and secrecy: Where’s the evidence? Commentary: BioNews, 334, 14 November 2005
  • Creating a life to save a life? Reflections on the conception of ‘saviour siblings’, Journal of Fertility Counselling, 2005, 12, 2, 34-39.
  • Reproductive tourism - a price worth paying for reproductive autonomy? Critical Social Policy, 2005, 25, 1, 91-114 (with Abigail Farrand).
  • Previous semen donors and their views regarding the sharing of information with offspring. Human Reproduction, 2005, 20, 6, 1670-1675 (with Marilyn Crawshaw, Ruth Curson and Ken Daniels).
  • Why wouldn’t you tell? Telling donor-conceived children about their conception, Health Ethics Today, 15, 1, 2005, 4 (with Irene Ryll)
2004
  • Families’ experiences of sharing Information about donor conception. Keynote speech at DC Network annual meeting, London, 13 March 2004.
  • Our genetic inheritance Professional Social Work March 2004, 3.
  • Egg sharing: a vehicle for compulsory counselling? Commentary: BioNews 251, 29 March, 2004
  • Families’ experiences of sharing information about donor conception. DC Network News, 23, Spring, 2004, 1-7. http://www.dcnetwork.org/
  • Donor anonymity and secrecy versus openness concerning the genetic origins of the offspring: international perspectives. Keynote speech at Conference ‘Access to information about genetic origins and identity to children born as a result of gamete donation’. Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 18 May 2004.
  • Sharing genetic origins information in families created following donor conception, paper given at International Federation of Fertility Societies’ World Congress, Montreal, 26 May 2004 (with Darren Langdridge) Abstract 308.7, p. 97
  • Donor information in the UK: an analysis of responses to the Department of Health consultation, paper given at International Federation of Fertility Societies’ World Congress, Montreal, 26 May 2004 (with Chris Cameron and Lucy Frith) Abstract 309.1, p. 97
  • Social work in the field of assisted human reproduction. advanced practice workshop at Social Work and Health and Mental Health conference, Quebec 27 May 2004 (with Ken Daniels, Jean Haase and Petra Thorn)
  • Families’ experiences of sharing information about donor conception. Open lecture given at Royal Alexandra Hospital, Edmonton, Canada. Organised by Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Maternal Fetal Medicine Division and the Perinatal Clinical Research Centre, 1 June 2004.
  • Getting your research published. Paper given at JUC/SWEC UK Post Graduate Research Workshop ‘Enhancing Capacity and Advancing Methods in Post Graduate Social Work and Social Care Research’. Queen’s University, Belfast, 31 August-1 September 2004.
  • Transplant tourism, presumed consent and ethical organ donation. Paper given at 5th National Conference of the Palliative Care Education Interest Group. Harrogate, 1-2 October 2004.
  • Involving children in health and social research, paper given at International Association of Schools of Social Work Conference, Adelaide, October 2004 (with Rachel Balen, Helen Calabretto, Claire Fraser, Chris Horrocks and Martin Manby)
  • Families’ experiences of sharing information about donor conception. Infertility Connection of Edmonton, Royal Alexandra Hospital, Edmonton 25 November 2004.
  • Is donor anonymity in donor-assisted conception compatible with the well-being of children? UAH/SCH Clinical Ethics Committee and John Dossetor Health Ethics Centre: Grand Rounds/Health Ethics Seminar. Walter Mackenzie Health Sciences Centre, Edmonton, 30 November 2004 (sponsored by the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research).
  • Looking to the future for BJSW, Professional Social Work, October, 2004, 9 (with Helen Masson)
  • Patient experiences of an ‘egg sharing’ programme. Human Fertility, 2004, 7, 3, 157-162. (ISSN 1464-7273)
  • Anonymity in donor-assisted conception and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. International Journal of Children’s Rights, 2004, 12, 89-104 (with Abigail Farrand).
  • Meeting the rights and needs of donor-conceived people: the contribution of a voluntary contact register. Nordisk Socialt Arbeid, 2004, 24, 4, 318-330 (with Jennifer Speirs)
  • Policy formation in gamete donation and egg sharing in the UK - a critical appraisal. Social Science and Medicine, 2004, 59, 12, 2617-2626(with Marilyn Crawshaw and Ken Daniels).
  • Third Party Assisted Conception across Cultures: Social, Legal and Ethical Perspectives. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2004 (joint editor with Ruth Landau) (ISBN 1 84310 084 3 [pb] 1 84310 085 [hb])
  • Implications Counselling for People Considering Donor-Assisted Conception. BICA Practice Guide Series. Sheffield: British Infertility Counselling Association, 2004 (ISBN 1 901 406253) (editor)
2003
  • Donor debate is too polarised, Community Care, 1462, 6-12 March 2003, 23
  • Anonymous gamete donation: some steps in the right direction Commentary. BioNews 8 April 2003.
  • Research into practice, Community Care, 1473, 22-28 May 2003, 51.
  • Recruiting Semen Donors under an Information Sharing System: A Study of Donors’ Views. Report to the Department of Health (with Ken Daniels, Ruth Curson and Marilyn Crawshaw). May 2003.
  • Meeting the rights and needs of donor-conceived people and their social and genetic parents, paper given at International Federation of Social Workers Conference, Copenhagen, 26-29 May 2003 (with Jennifer Speirs)
  • ‘It’s not about the money. It’s about becoming parents and trying to help other people as well’. Experiences of an ‘egg sharing’ programme in the UK. Paper given at the British Fertility Society Annual Meeting, Aberdeen University, 13-17 July 2003 (awarded British Fertility Society Best Abstract for Counselling and Psychosocial Aspects of Infertility and Reproductive Medicine)
  • The Human Fertilisation and Embryology (Deceased Fathers) Act 2003, Journal of Fertility Counselling, 10, 3, 2003,
  • Access to information about gamete and embryo donors in the UK, Obs & Gynae Today, 2003, VIII, 3, 109-112 (ISSN 0971 8133)
  • ‘Opening the Record’: Planning the Provision of Counselling to People applying for Information from the HFEA Register. Report of the HFEA Register Counselling Project Steering Group. Sheffield: British Infertility Counselling Association. January 2003 ISBN 1 901406 20 2 (member of Project Steering Group)
  • Foreword. In Lorbach, C. Experiences of Donor Conception: Parents, Offspring and Donors through the Years, London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2003, pp 11-12 (ISBN 1 84310-122-X)
  • Fertility Rights: Will the UK’s Human Rights Act make any difference to access to assisted conception treatment? In Gunning, J. and Szoke, H. (eds) The Regulation of Assisted Reproductive Technology. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003, pp. 151-163 (ISBN: 0 7546 2292 4).
  • Service user evaluations: young people, participation and client-centredness Youth and Policy 2003-2004 (Winter) 82, 16-26 (with Christine Horrocks)
  • Assisted human reproduction: contemporary policy and practice in the UK. In Singer, D. and Hunter, M. (eds) Assisted Human Reproduction: Psychological and Ethical Dilemmas. London: Whurr Publishers, 2003, pp. 1-27 (with Nina Martin and Claire Potter) (ISBN 1 86156 349 3).
  • Paying for it? Surrogacy, market forces and assisted conception. In Cook, R., Sclater, S. D. and Kaganas, F. (eds) Surrogate Motherhood: International Perspectives. London: Hart, 2003 pp. 227-242 (with Claire Potter) (ISBN: 1841132551)
2002
  • Donor conceived people’s views about their genetic origins, Children in Scotland, May, 2002, 9-11.
  • What research says about the experiences of people conceived following donor assisted conception, paper given at conference: ‘Donor information consultation – providing information about sperm, egg and embryo donors’, organised by PROGAR, St Alban’s Centre, London, 16 May 2002
  • A major rethink on donor anonymity, Professional Social Work, June, 2002, 9.
  • Arguments for identifying donors, paper given at public meeting: ‘Donor anonymity’, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 13 June 2002
  • The British experience: the UK consultation on access to genetic origins information, paper given at conference: ‘Donor conception: the personal, the professional and the public policy issues’, organised by The Infertility Network, The Michener Institute. Toronto, 22-23 June 2002
  • A child’s right to know, New Scientist, 6 July 2002, 28
  • Research into practice, Community Care, 1435, 15-21 August 2002, 45
  • Research into practice, Community Care, 1438, 5-11 September 2002, 47
  • Is it ethical to pay for gametes? paper given at annual meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, Seattle, 12-17 October 2002
  • Donor registries: the UK. paper given at annual meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, Seattle, 12-17 October 2002
  • Information on genetic origins information in donor-assisted conception: is knowing who you are a human rights issue? Human Fertility, 2002, 5, 185-192. (ISSN 1464-7273)
  • ‘Warning – these sperm could sue you one day’: access to information about gamete or embryo donors in the UK, ART and Science, 10, 2002, 10-11.
  • Subsidized IVF: the development of ‘egg sharing’ in the UK, Human Reproduction, 2002, 17, 12, 101-106
  • School Social Work Worldwide, Washington: National Association of Social Workers, 2002 (joint editor with Marion Huxtable) (ISBN 0 87101 348 7) 

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