The Daily Telegraph

Like Joanna in Happy Valley, I was a middle-class diazepam addict

The BBC series has shone a light on the dangerous effects of prescripti­on drugs, says Miranda Levy

- 'The Insomnia Diaries: How I Learned to Sleep Again' by Miranda Levy is published by Octopus Books

It’s mid-afternoon and a young mother is lying under her duvet. Zonked out by the little blue pills in her bedside drawer, she’s unable to collect her children from school; increasing­ly, she has to rely on favours from a neighbour. Her hair is like straw, she’s skinny and pale, as if she hasn’t seen the sun for months.

Viewers of the new series of BBC drama Happy Valley, the next episode of which airs tomorrow, might recognise the character of Joanna Hepworth. Joanna is the struggling wife of PE teacher Rob and mother of two little girls. Watching her, I felt a sickening jolt of recognitio­n; 10 years ago, that tranquilis­er-addicted spectre was me.

For five years in the 2010s, while in my mid 40s, I was desperatel­y dependent on the same drug as Joanna – diazepam, also known as Valium and one of a class of drugs called benzodiaze­pines. I was prescribed it aged 42, at the end of an unhappy marriage, rather than in the throes of an abusive one like Joanna. I didn’t get my pills from a dodgy pharmacist, as in the show, but from a legitimate high-street chemist down the road.

However, like Joanna – and millions of other perfectly respectabl­e people who have suffered because of this and similar drugs – I was initially prescribed my diazepam for insomnia by a family GP.

Valium sounds like a relic from a bygone age. The “Mother’s Little Helper” of the 1965 Rolling Stone song (“Doctor, please, some more of these/ Outside the door, she took four more”), GPS started prescribin­g it in the 1950s, tranquilli­sing a generation of miserable women (and they were mostly women).

In the 1980s, research started to flag-up serious issues of addiction and abuse and the number of prescripti­ons fell. It went out of fashion. But diazepam – and its close “benzo” relatives – is still out there. In fact, according to an April 2022 report by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice), approximat­ely 300,000 adults in the UK have been taking benzodiaze­pines or related drugs for 12 months or longer. More research from Public Health England found that 1.4 million people in England had received a benzodiaze­pine prescripti­on in the past year. “Given the possible adverse effects of such use, this represents a potentiall­y serious public health problem,” said the report.

Most of these patients were described by Nice as “older”, but benzos are also a problem for younger people. Xanax – a newer variety – in particular, was a factor in more than a third of fatal prescripti­on-drug overdoses in the US last year. Valiumtype drugs were implicated in the deaths of singer Whitney Houston and actor Heath Ledger.

I didn’t look like a prospectiv­e addict when I turned up at my GP surgery in

I knew Valium was 'bad' but I was so exhausted and overcome that I simply didn’t care

June 2010. I was the editor of a women’s magazine and the mother of two primary-school children, with a large circle of friends. But my husband had recently “called time” on our marriage. Distraught by this sudden change in my previously secure existence, I stopped being able to sleep. Wired and upset, I told the doctor my tale of woe. He didn’t even look up, but reached for his green pad and prescribed me a benzodiaze­pine for sleep. There was no offer of therapy, no attempt to solve the root of my distress.

When, after a few weeks, the pills stopped working and I was struggling to sleep again, I was sent to an NHS psychiatri­st who added in all manner of other pills, including a “daytime” benzo similar to diazepam, then, later, diazepam itself. Somehow, in the recesses of my squeezed-lemon brain, I knew that Valium was “bad”, but I was so exhausted, overcome and desperate for sleep, I simply didn’t care.

On the next visit, in response to my continuing insomnia, my psychiatri­st doubled my dose of benzodiaze­pines. He later upped it again over the phone.

Diazepam feels brilliant when you start taking it. You feel calm, detached, the world is slightly fuzzy at the edges. The problem is that you can’t be bothered to do anything. Though my insomnia was still the main debilitati­ng issue, the benzos hardly helped. Within a fortnight, I was on sick leave from my job – I wouldn’t actually work again for another eight years. Thankfully, my kids were mostly being cared for by my ex, their grandparen­ts, and neighbours who’d drop them back from school while I hid upstairs in bed.

The other issue with Valium is that you become tolerant to it – meaning you increasing­ly have to take more to get the same effect and so you run out early. I would “hide” my blister pack in a pair of boots in the wardrobe, promising myself I would only take an extra pill in an “emergency”. But it was always an emergency. Consequent­ly, I soon learned about the joy of withdrawal symptoms.

If you stop Valium suddenly, you are thrown into a vortex of stomachchu­rning anxiety, insomnia and unbearable jitters. You also feel very, very sick. I eventually became agoraphobi­c (another common side-effect), and barely left the house for three years. My only trip out was on Monday mornings, to pick up my pills from the chemist. There I would stand in the street, waiting for the shop to open, hopping from foot to foot in desperatio­n. If the pharmacist was even 10 minutes late, I was beside myself. I’ll never forget her looks of sympathy and concern, dealing with this unlikely junkie clutching her Chloé handbag. But there was little she could do. I was on a consultant’s prescripti­on.

At one point, I was on 50mg of diazepam a day. The standard dose is five to 10mg. I knew I needed help. Unfortunat­ely, while there are helplines and organisati­ons out there for people hooked on heroin, cocaine, and alcohol, there is very little help for people addicted to prescripti­on drugs. And so, finally, in October 2014 – utterly at the end of my tether – I took myself to rehab. When the counsellor­s at this facility took me off the drug way too quickly – leaving me in a frenzy of agitation – I was moved to a psych ward for the best part of a month, before going home to live with my dad – at the age of 47. But at least I was off the diazepam.

The journey to my recovery was long, slow, and painful, but over the next three years or so (during which I basically sat on my bed and watched Netflix) the effects of the diazepam began to recede. I slowly started exercising again, eating properly, rebuilding my relationsh­ips – particular­ly with my children.

By 2019 – something I never dared dream was possible – I started work again. Then, this time last year, I bought a beautiful new flat. I have a wonderful new partner. My children and I have rebuilt our bonds and are closer than ever. I have never taken another Valium.

The medical profession does – on the whole – have a more responsibl­e approach to diazepam these days, though some time-stretched GPS still dole out benzos too readily. And, as the Happy Valley storyline highlights, many patients who can’t get their “fix” on prescripti­on resort to buying the pills from illegal sources.

The main problem today is the woeful lack of support for the real and distressin­g issue of managing withdrawal. Let’s hope Happy Valley brings the issue back into the spotlight. I’m thinking again of Joanna Hepworth, in her afternoon drug haze. How will it end for her? How, also, will it end for the hundreds and thousands of people in real diazepam addiction, as they suffer and stumble from doctor-supplied prescripti­on to doctor-supplied prescripti­on?

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 ?? Happy Valley ?? Addicted: Mollie Winnard plays Joanna Hepworth in the new series of
Happy Valley Addicted: Mollie Winnard plays Joanna Hepworth in the new series of
 ?? ?? Transforme­d: Miranda Levy before her recovery, above; and now, left
Transforme­d: Miranda Levy before her recovery, above; and now, left

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