Chloe Sims has furiously hit back at Ulrika Jonsson after the TV presenter criticised the TOWIE star for failing to be being honest with her daughter about her plastic surgery.
TOWIE star Chloe, reportedly told her daughter Madison, 16, she sustained bruises 'from falling down' rather than going under the knife.
Chloe's comments then prompted Ulrika Jonsson, 54, to accuse the reality TV star of 'rejecting the principles of parenting that require us to be frank'.
A spokesperson for Chloe has since revealed that she is 'deeply disappointed' by Ulrika's comments.
"Chloe is deeply disappointed by Ulrika's uneducated comments and misinformation on twisting fact from its original source interview in celebrating motherhood," the source said.
"And the remarkable bond Chloe has with her daughter into a piece that bears little accuracy, but bitterness in its reflection from its author. For a woman that professes to support and empower other woman, this is somewhat contrary to the values she professes to champion," they added.
Chloe, shares daughter Madison with her ex Matthew.
The star recently said she regrets ever mentioning that she had her teenage daughter assessed for ADHD and autism and says she never followed up on the testing.
The 39-year-old The Only Way Is Essex star is proud mum to 16-year-old daughter Madison who she shares with an ex-fiancé Matthew.
Chloe recently said she had her daughter tested for the behavioural condition autism as well as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder as she suspected her daughter could ‘possibly’ have both conditions.
However, she feels her candid confession about the testing has been overblown and now fans are overly focused on the past tests.
Opening up to OK!, Chloe was asked to explain the testing process that Madison had been subjected to in the past.
She explained: “I had her assessed and it was a possibility, but we’ve never followed it up. Now it seems to be all over the internet. I probably shouldn’t have been that open back then.
“That was an error on my part because now we get asked all the time, but we don’t talk about that anymore. I just had her assessed when she was seven, and they said potentially, that’s all.”