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St Michael's Church in Dundry hosted the lighting of their peace lamp, seen here on the right with the church bellringers, while long-serving Dundry Royal British Legion member Jim Clarke veteran was collecting at Sainsbury's on Winterstoke Road."You’ve got no right to judge, we’re still parents and that’s our baby that’s just been taken."
Two of Kayleigh’s seven children moved into care after she was in a volatile relationship.They are among more than 107,000 children in care in the UK - a rise of 16% over 10 years.Wales has seen an increase of 79% in 20 years, but one council is bucking the trend.
In 2012, Neath Port Talbot (NPT) council in south Wales had more than 500 children in care - the highest rate in the country.Since then, it has halved the number of children in care and has one of the lowest rates in Wales, despite contacts to the team increasing by 53%.
looking at what it is doing differently, speaking to an emergency social worker, families who have worked with social services and a 15-year-old girl who talks about her experience of being taken into care.
As Kayleigh, 35, sits cuddling her baby on the sofa, it is difficult to picture her two eldest children going into care.Planning a treat or chill-out time before and after results is something Les, Anna, Emily and Stevie all say is important.
Les recommends offering a family trip out to the cinema or bowling the night before, to help ease the stress.Emily says she planned to go out on results night with her friends and her sister, so she had something to look forward to.
"We booked it so we could either celebrate or blow off some steam - a good night out to forget the stress," she says.Stevie says it is important to have a conversation and find out what your teenager would like you to do before, on and after results day. She says make plans, but be flexible, as things can change very quickly.