Corrie's Bev Callard says her depression medication has been withdrawn

Beverley Callard, who has been 'battling the demons of depression', will be deprived of a drug after pharmaceutical bosses pulled the medication because it's not making money, she said.

The actress, who plays Liz McDonald in Coronation Street, did not say what the medication was, but suggested it was stopped for financial reasons.

Beverley, 59, tweeted: “Been battling the demons of depression! One of the meds I’m on, has been stopped by pharmaceutical company, apparently it doesn’t make money.”

Corrie's Beverley Callard

Corrie’s Beverley Callard (ITV)

 

She added: “I’m getting there!!!! Thanks so much for all your good wishes xxxx”

The actress ended up almost £150,000 in debt after two pubs she ran with her partner, John, went bust in 2008. A year later she suffered a panic attack, was diagnosed with clinical depression and admitted to a psychiatric hospital.

Appearing on Piers Morgan’s Life Stories show in 2014, Beverley said she came very close to taking her own life.

She said: “I tried maybe half a dozen times, but it wasn’t a cry for help at all. I’d known for quite a while that I wasn’t myself, but I didn’t really know what to do about it.”

Beverley Callard

Beverley Callard (Ian West/PA)

 

“I was going to work and I was still filming and I didn’t really talk to anyone about it and on that day they took me into The Priory in the early hours of the next morning and John said, and my doctor said, I looked like a 100-year-old woman. They tried different medications but none of them seemed to work.”

Doctors gave her electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) which had the side-effect of destroying her short-term memory, making it difficult to learn her lines.

 

Corrie's Beverley Callard with Kym Marsh

Corrie’s Beverley Callard with Kym Marsh (ITV)

 

She said: “I actually, now, don’t know how I learnt my lines. It was really a double life at that point. People stand on the gate waiting to meet people who are in Coronation Street and I couldn’t sign my autograph because I couldn’t remember how to spell my name.”

“I truly couldn’t write my name for the first six months.”

The actress said she would stay on medication for 'at least another couple of years' to keep her from 'going into that black hole'.

 

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