News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Father Using Daughter's Death To Sound Warning About |
Title: | US PA: Father Using Daughter's Death To Sound Warning About |
Published On: | 2006-08-16 |
Source: | Valley Independent, The (Monessen, PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 05:35:59 |
FATHER USING DAUGHTER'S DEATH TO SOUND WARNING ABOUT DRUGS
CALIFORNIA, Pa. - William Brna is trying to make the most out of a
grim situation that has forever changed his life.
The Carroll Township resident had been helping his daughter,
Gwendolyn Marie Brna Venanzi, battle a heroin addiction for the past
three years.
Venanzi, of Pleasant Hills, lost her fight with the drug July 5, when
paramedics found her dead at a house party in the Allentown section
of Pittsburgh, where evidence of heroin use was found.
While Brna won't know for sure if his daughter's death was
drug-related until toxicology tests are completed, he's certain her
addiction contributed to her demise.
The loss has left a void in Brna's life - one he has decided to fill
by speaking out on the warning signs of heroin addiction.
Brna came to California University of Pennsylvania on Tuesday to
share his story as a guest on "Valley Views," an issues-oriented
television show sponsored jointly by the university and The Valley
Independent and hosted by Bob Burke, managing editor of the newspaper.
At the age of 41, Venanzi left behind her husband, two daughters, a
teenage stepdaughter and four siblings.
Brna said he thought his daughter was on the road to recovery not
long before her death.
"Up until about two months before she died, she was very interested
in getting clean," he said.
"I don't know what happened. She had been living in our house for
almost three years. She suddenly decided she wanted to go back (to
the drug scene.). Two months later, she was dead."
Venanzi spent two weeks in jail and had been on probation for a
possession of drug paraphernalia charge and another crime that hit
close to home.
Brna said he and his wife turned their daughter in to police after
she stole their checkbook in an attempt to get money for drugs.
Brna said his daughter was devoted to turning her life around after
she was arrested. But she ultimately could not beat the drug.
"She admitted freely that she was an addict ... and was willing to
take any help we would get her," Brna said. "She did go to rehab.
When she came out, she was cheerful and happy and I thought we had
made headway. But it evidently did not take too long for her to get
back to her old habits. About two months before her death, she went
back on the streets.
"I kept thinking we would find the magic key that would open it."
Brna said it was difficult finding help for his daughter.
"You cannot find one agency that will recommend other agencies. They
all want to do it themselves," he said. "There is help available but,
generally speaking, the different organizations are only interested
in their point of view. If something doesn't work, they will not
refer you to someone else.
"The system is to blame in that nobody really cares. The people or
the organizations that can help, they don't care. They want that
money, that's all. I'm not mad at the system. I'm just angry that I
could not help my daughter because someone out there was working against me."
Venanzi had undergone psychiatric evaluations and spent time in three
different drug rehabilitation facilities. She also was given
methadone in fighting her addiction.
But nothing seemed to cure her.
"The problem with the methadone clinics is they make no attempt to
wean them off the methadone," Brna said.
In one instance, Brna said his daughter was misdiagnosed by a
psychologist's nurse as having bipolar disorder.
"I have since found out is that last thing you can do is to diagnose
mental problems in a drug addict," he said. " "The symptoms, you
can't separate them."
Brna said the penalty for dealing heroin should be more severe.
"It's been my personal feeling that any major dealer of heroin, if
he's arrested or picked up, should be automatically killed," he said.
" Get rid of him. He's not doing any good for anybody."
With the news of Venanzi's death came some denial on the family's part.
"Following the death, her mother didn't cry at all until about three
days ago. It finally hit her what had happened," Brna said.
To honor his daughter, Brna has made it his mission to share her story.
"It's almost a guaranteed death if the addiction is not controlled,"
he said. "Maybe I can point the way for somebody to go and maybe I
can make someone aware of the dangers of heroin addiction.
"I don't even know how much of an outreach I can do, but, if her
death will spare one other person, it's worth it."
Brna's appearance on "Valley Views" will air on CUTV six times over
the next two weeks - 8 p.m. tonight, Saturday, Monday, Aug. 23, Aug.
26 and Aug. 28
CALIFORNIA, Pa. - William Brna is trying to make the most out of a
grim situation that has forever changed his life.
The Carroll Township resident had been helping his daughter,
Gwendolyn Marie Brna Venanzi, battle a heroin addiction for the past
three years.
Venanzi, of Pleasant Hills, lost her fight with the drug July 5, when
paramedics found her dead at a house party in the Allentown section
of Pittsburgh, where evidence of heroin use was found.
While Brna won't know for sure if his daughter's death was
drug-related until toxicology tests are completed, he's certain her
addiction contributed to her demise.
The loss has left a void in Brna's life - one he has decided to fill
by speaking out on the warning signs of heroin addiction.
Brna came to California University of Pennsylvania on Tuesday to
share his story as a guest on "Valley Views," an issues-oriented
television show sponsored jointly by the university and The Valley
Independent and hosted by Bob Burke, managing editor of the newspaper.
At the age of 41, Venanzi left behind her husband, two daughters, a
teenage stepdaughter and four siblings.
Brna said he thought his daughter was on the road to recovery not
long before her death.
"Up until about two months before she died, she was very interested
in getting clean," he said.
"I don't know what happened. She had been living in our house for
almost three years. She suddenly decided she wanted to go back (to
the drug scene.). Two months later, she was dead."
Venanzi spent two weeks in jail and had been on probation for a
possession of drug paraphernalia charge and another crime that hit
close to home.
Brna said he and his wife turned their daughter in to police after
she stole their checkbook in an attempt to get money for drugs.
Brna said his daughter was devoted to turning her life around after
she was arrested. But she ultimately could not beat the drug.
"She admitted freely that she was an addict ... and was willing to
take any help we would get her," Brna said. "She did go to rehab.
When she came out, she was cheerful and happy and I thought we had
made headway. But it evidently did not take too long for her to get
back to her old habits. About two months before her death, she went
back on the streets.
"I kept thinking we would find the magic key that would open it."
Brna said it was difficult finding help for his daughter.
"You cannot find one agency that will recommend other agencies. They
all want to do it themselves," he said. "There is help available but,
generally speaking, the different organizations are only interested
in their point of view. If something doesn't work, they will not
refer you to someone else.
"The system is to blame in that nobody really cares. The people or
the organizations that can help, they don't care. They want that
money, that's all. I'm not mad at the system. I'm just angry that I
could not help my daughter because someone out there was working against me."
Venanzi had undergone psychiatric evaluations and spent time in three
different drug rehabilitation facilities. She also was given
methadone in fighting her addiction.
But nothing seemed to cure her.
"The problem with the methadone clinics is they make no attempt to
wean them off the methadone," Brna said.
In one instance, Brna said his daughter was misdiagnosed by a
psychologist's nurse as having bipolar disorder.
"I have since found out is that last thing you can do is to diagnose
mental problems in a drug addict," he said. " "The symptoms, you
can't separate them."
Brna said the penalty for dealing heroin should be more severe.
"It's been my personal feeling that any major dealer of heroin, if
he's arrested or picked up, should be automatically killed," he said.
" Get rid of him. He's not doing any good for anybody."
With the news of Venanzi's death came some denial on the family's part.
"Following the death, her mother didn't cry at all until about three
days ago. It finally hit her what had happened," Brna said.
To honor his daughter, Brna has made it his mission to share her story.
"It's almost a guaranteed death if the addiction is not controlled,"
he said. "Maybe I can point the way for somebody to go and maybe I
can make someone aware of the dangers of heroin addiction.
"I don't even know how much of an outreach I can do, but, if her
death will spare one other person, it's worth it."
Brna's appearance on "Valley Views" will air on CUTV six times over
the next two weeks - 8 p.m. tonight, Saturday, Monday, Aug. 23, Aug.
26 and Aug. 28
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