Tamzin White’s mother, Louise, died on 16 January at the age of 40.
“She didn’t know why she was like this, she didn’t want to ever be like this,” Tamzin told BBC Radio Foyle.
The 18-year-old said Louise’s addiction would affect her mother’s mood and she would often become agitated or hostile towards people around her.
It was a far cry from what she was like sober, Tamzin said.
“It wasn’t my mummy when she was on the drink, it just wasn’t her. It was a different Louise.”
Tamzin, along with other family members, pleaded with her mother to stop abusing alcohol on numerous occasions.
“I asked her to stop countless times, I said to her countless times ‘you are going to die’ – God is not going to give you many more chances mummy because he has already given you so many chances.'”
Louise’s addiction had a huge effect on the family. Tamzin said the ordeal was “heart-wrenching” for everyone, and took its toll on herself and her two younger sisters.
on Friday, the head of a Derry treatment centre has made renewed calls for an addiction centre of excellence to be set up in the north west.
Funding provisions for an addiction centre in Derry were outlined in the New Decade, New Approach deal.
The deal restored devolved government to Northern Ireland after almost three years of political deadlock.
Tommy Canning, who runs Northlands community-based treatment centre, said the “situation hasn’t improved”.
Said Mr Canning: “We know this year that the amount of work we have been doing through Covid has increased.
“There is a 25% increase in the uptake of first-time appointments that we are experiencing since the lockdown began in March.
“We are facing a situation where our bed capacity has had to be reduced by 50%.”
Mr Canning said Northlands would usually see about 1,600 people in the clinic during a typical year, but between March and December 2020 that figure was already at 1,700 and is continuing to increase.
Tags: