SSAFA’s Stepping Stone Home an invaluable service
26 May 2023
Stepping Stone Home – the female-only home for servicewomen, the spouses of serving or former UK military personnel, and their children – run by SSAFA, has operated since 1997.
In those 26 years, it has provided a safe and welcoming home for scores of women and children leaving domestic abuse giving them an environment where they can begin to form a new life elsewhere. Women are supported to access local health, social, legal, and education services, and to achieve their own personal goals.
Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) has published an evaluation of SSAFA’s Stepping Stone Home, which it calls “… a unique and invaluable service”, with ARU Senior Research Fellow Louise Morgan – saying: “This service evaluation has revealed the life-changing impact that SSAFA’s Stepping Stone Home has on the lives of women of the Armed Forces community who may find themselves without somewhere to live.
“The overwhelmingly positive experiences of women who had used the service are testament to the hard work and dedication of the Stepping Stone Home staff members.”
She added that the evaluation has provided information on help-seeking experiences of those women who had accessed support from SSAFA in order to move away from domestic abuse
Dr Morgan concluded: “The report explains how the knowledge gained from these women’s stories can be used to inform domestic abuse policy and to further develop existing support services, and sets out areas requiring further research.
“Building on the findings of this evaluation will enable SSAFA to continue to develop ways of meeting the evolving needs of this important part of the military community.”
Lynne Doherty, SSAFA’s Director of Social Care Operations, said: “We’re immensely grateful to Louise and her colleagues at Anglia Ruskin University for this report, which will help SSAFA and Stepping Stone evolve our work and our support for women in the military community leaving harmful and potentially dangerous domestic abuse in the future.
“There are some clear recommendations within the report for us to explore and it will be vital we continue to work in partnership with others to ensure that those who have experience abuse know about and receive the support they need to rebuild their lives and establish normality for themselves and their children going forward.”