Denishar Woods suffered an electric shock after using a garden tap. Photo / Channel 9
"I want my baby back! I want my baby back!" Lacey Harrison wailed.
The mother-of-seven wept uncontrollably as she revealed her daughter had suffered a catastrophic brain injury and may not survive after receiving an electric shock from a garden tap at the family's public housing property in Perth.
Denishar Woods, 11, remains in a critical but stable condition at Princess Margaret Hospital after being shocked by up to 230 volts AC when she touched the tap at the Beldon property on Saturday night, reports News.com.au.
Ms Harrison told reporters outside hospital on Friday that if her daughter does survive she will be in a vegetative state.
"Denishar suffered a catastrophic brain injury, which won't bring her back to me ever," she said.
"I want to sit by her bedside and I won't leave her, but it's going to be scary and as the doctor said, it's going to be very ugly."
Ms Harrison says doctors predict "she won't make it".
"I like to believe she will, I need to believe," she said.
Lawyers have said Denishar's family may be eligible for a multimillion-dollar compensation claim.
The state government has offered short-term motel accommodation to the family, but they have instead been staying with relatives.
Housing Minister Peter Tinley told reporters Ms Harrison had also been offered a five-bedroom house.
"But as you can imagine at the moment, she is not in a particularly good space to make decisions like that," he said.
Mr Tinley would not comment on the ongoing Energy Safety investigation, which is technically complex, but said he wanted to assure Ms Harrison "we will get to the bottom of it".
"It would be premature for me to speculate about any of those outcomes," he said.
Mr Tinley declined to comment on Ms Harrison's previous claim that after she felt a mild electric shock and contacted the Housing Department's emergency line, they failed to tell her not to touch anything.