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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Web: Mother's Fears For Three Heroin Daughters
Title:UK: Web: Mother's Fears For Three Heroin Daughters
Published On:2002-03-22
Source:BBC News (UK Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-24 16:41:05
MOTHER'S FEARS FOR THREE HEROIN DAUGHTERS

A mother of four has spoken of her anger and pain after three of her
daughters became hooked on heroin.

Theresa Dodd is desperately worried for one of her children, Angelica, 21,
who is living rough and begging for the money to pay for her next fix of
the drug.

Her family's plight highlights growing concern that heroin, once associated
with deprived urban areas, has made in-roads into middle-class Britain.

Mrs Dodd is a nurse and her husband, Charles, a partner is a London
solicitors' firm.

The family live in the Kent town of Tunbridge Wells, which has become a
by-word for respectability and conservative values. Yet its streets are
also home to Angelica, who Mrs Dodd fears could by killed by her addiction.

"I'm so frightened, so angry and upset that there isn't anything any of us
can do," she said.

"I fear being one of those women that talks after their child's death."

Shocking pictures

Her outpouring of grief follows the high-profile case of Rachel Whitear and
that of Rebecca Maynard, 20, who was found dead in the genteel town of
Henley-on-Thames. Both died of heroin overdoses.

Miss Whitear, who had dropped out of university and went to live in Exmouth
with her boyfriend, died aged 21.

Her mother, Pauline Holcroft, hit the headlines in February, when she
decided to release shocking police pictures of Rachel's bruised and
heroin-ravaged body taken at the scene of her death.

Mrs Dodd's said the story had prompted her to speak out.

"I want to tell the whole world. I'm really bleeding on the inside. You
cannot see the bleeding but I'm bleeding from stress."

Warning to parents

One of her daughters, Antonia, 30, is recovering after she quit heroin a
year ago. Another, Thomasina, is also battling to stay off the drug.

Antonia Dodd warned all parents that upbringing and class were no
indication of whether their children would turn to drugs.

"Being convinced that your child is not taking drugs does not mean that
your child is not taking drugs," she told BBC South East Today.

"People from all different backgrounds do it."

Looking for support

Mrs Dodd has received moral support from her local church, but said she
would like to see a local support agency to help parents in her predicament.

Hugo Luck, south east regional manager for the National Treatment Agency,
says drug addiction spans the whole class system: "There is a growing
amount of use not just in the inner cities.

"This is a problem throughout the country, regardless of [affluence]."
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