By Richard Bilton BBC News |
Victoria White began drinking heavily as a teenager |
Ms White's liver disease is the result of heavy drinking.
She began drinking as a teenager and before her most recent hospital stay she had been consuming at least a bottle of brandy a day.
Doctors say her case is not unusual. According to government figures, a quarter of the adult population are thought to be drinking too much alcohol.
"Some people go their separate ways from alcohol. I didn't, I just carried on with it. You are selfish through drink. As long as you are all right, you just do not care," Ms White said.
Her mother, Debbie White, has watched alcohol slowly take over her daughter's life.
"When she was about 16 she started lying saying she had not had a drink but you could smell it on her. We would start finding bottles of vodka, bottles and bottles of cider hidden under her bed," she said.
ALCOHOL ABUSE - THE TOLL 50% rise in alcoholic liver disease in under-30s since 2001 70% of peak time admissions at the Royal A&E alcohol-related £400 - average in-patient costs per day £2.7bn - annual cost to NHS of alcohol-related care One in four adults drink more than recommended 9m people in the UK affected by alcohol abuse |
"I was OK at first. I would just have a couple and leave it and then as the days went to weeks I just started drinking again. And here I am today," she said from her hospital bed.
In agreeing to be interviewed in such ill health, she urged others to learn from her mistakes.
Ms White's doctor, liver specialist Paul Richardson, said his colleagues are seeing similar cases of irreparable damage.
"Both locally and nationally, people who work in hepatology have noticed an increase in alcoholic liver disease in a younger population," he said.
Overall consumption is falling but alcohol-related hospital admissions have doubled in a decade.
Professor Sir Ian Gilmore is chair of the UK Alcohol Health Alliance, which campaigns to increase awareness about alcohol.
"It's very difficult to know why our culture has changed so radically, but all the evidence suggests that the big drivers for the amount people drink are the price, the availability and the marketing and that is what we have been trying to push governments to look at."
FIND OUT MORE Richard Bilton presents Panorama: Dying for a Drink BBC One, Monday, 1 August at 8.30pm |
Brokering a strategy has been challenging.
Health groups, including the British Medical Association, decided to withdraw from the government's consultation process in March, citing the influence of the drinks industry on policy-making.
Anne Milton, the Minister for Public Health, said she was disappointed by their decision. "I am sad that people stopped talking to us because it is never productive," she said.
Gavin Partington of the Wine and Spirit Trade Association, said the industry is very willing to help limit alcohol abuse, and large companies are increasingly aware of their social responsibilities. "It is important for them to be seen to implement policies that are going to be tackling what is a very real problem."
But he said the industry believes in voluntary codes of practice rather than legislation to limit the availability, price or advertising.
He also added that people consuming dangerous and irresponsible levels of alcohol are in the minority.
The government's alcohol strategy report is expected later this year.
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