Pubdate: Fri, 30 May 2008 Source: Daily Mail (UK) Copyright: 2008 Associated Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/108 Author: Jaya Narain Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) SHOCKING VIDEO DIARY OF HEROIN ADDICT'S DESPERATE FINAL ATTEMPTS TO KICK THE DRUG TO BE SHOWN TO SCHOOLCHILDREN As a bright schoolboy from a loving middle-class family, Ben Rogers was expected to make a success of his life. Instead, he started taking drugs as a teenager and turned into a hopeless heroin addict, intent on scraping money together for his next fix. In 2006, after 13 years of addiction to the drug, Ben died suddenly from a brain haemorrhage in hospital while attempting to detox. During his last months, the 34-year-old filmed a video diary which showed his final desperate attempts to come off heroin. Now it could be shown to millions of secondary school pupils across the UK to give a graphic warning of the dangers of drugs. After a campaign by his mother Anne Rogers, hours of disturbing footage have been turned into a short DVD called Sick And Tired Of Feeling Sick And Tired. It will be part of an official anti-drugs pack sent out to teachers. The footage shows him preparing his drugs and talking about their effect on his life and family. He is also seen sharing his feelings with his Sooty puppet and injecting heroin into a vein in his groin. In another section, he tells the camera: 'I hope that when you look at this afterwards that you don't think I'm self-pitying because I know that I've done this to myself.' Mrs Rogers, 70 said Ben - the youngest of four children - showed no signs of problem behaviour as a young child. She and her husband, Mike, a design consultant for a pottery, had high hopes for him while bringing up their family in the village of Alton, Staffordshire. By the time he was 12, Ben had begun to drink in secret and by 17 he was hopelessly addicted to cannabis and other drugs. 'There were no signs or clues,' said Mrs Rogers, a grandmother-of-nine. 'He had a stable middle-class upbringing and all his siblings are well-grounded. 'He went to college and worked as a screenprinter but he was addicted to heroin and it destroyed his life. My son told me at 21 that he was on heroin and we spent 13 years trying to help him fight his addiction - but we lost. It is an evil, evil thing.' Mrs Rogers, who still lives in Alton, said: 'Like many others he started on cannabis, then started smoking heroin and eventually he was injecting.' After the death of her son, Mrs Rogers nursed her husband through the last stages of cancer before he died nine weeks later. Despite her loss, she was determined to warn teenagers of the effects of hard drugs. Shortly before he died, Ben gave what he had recorded to Darren Teale from Junction 15, a small independent video-arts company based in Stoke-on-Trent. Mr Teale edited more than 30 hours of harrowing footage to make a 20-minute film which charts the last weeks of Ben's addiction. Then, Mrs Rogers contacted Government ministers, health departments, and drug and alcohol services about the DVD. Initially the hard-hitting education pack including the film has gone to schools in Staffordshire but she is pressing the Home Office to make it available nationwide. She said: 'Ben came from a happy, middle-class family. Friends say that if it can happen to us, it can to anyone. 'It's all very painful to watch but I'm willing to go through it time and again if it can help stop the same happening to other youngsters. 'The final scene is perhaps the hardest. Ben is desperately searching for a vein to inject into. 'He looks as if he is dying as the heroin passes into his body. It's as if you can see his life just ebbing away.' The DVD has already been shown to college students across Staffordshire and used by local police to give officers an insight into addiction. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom