The Province

OD victim’s family felt trapped by system

Mother says she wants parents more involved in decisions about their children’s health

- AMY SMART

VICTORIA — The parents of a Victoria teen who died Friday from an accidental overdose say they felt trapped by a medical system that didn’t give them a say in their son’s painkiller prescripti­ons.

Sixteen-year-old Elliot Eurchuk, whom his parents described as a kind and funny athlete, died at his home after taking street drugs they believe he was using to help him sleep.

Rachel Staples and Brock Eurchuk say their son’s drug use started after he was prescribed opioids for four surgical procedures last year, even though they had requested alternativ­e treatments. Two surgeries treated his fractured jaw, which he broke on a soccer field, and two others were for shoulder reconstruc­tions from another sports injury. In February, Elliot was in hospital again for three weeks with an infection.

His parents say they again asked for alternativ­es to opioids, and for access to his medical records when he overdosed after leaving the hospital on a day pass. They say they were told Elliot was old enough to make his own medical decisions.

In B.C., the Infants Act says children under 19 may consent to a medical treatment on their own under certain conditions: the health-care provider is sure the treatment is in the child’s best interest, and the child understand­s the potential risks and benefits.

It’s up to the health-care provider to assess and ensure the child’s understand­ing of the treatment.

The concept of maturity has generally replaced chronologi­cal age in laws across the country, according to the Canadian Medical Protective Associatio­n.

Only Quebec has establishe­d a fixed age of consent at 14, below which the consent of a parent or guardian is required for treatment, the associatio­n said on its website.

Staples and Eurchuk believe their son started buying street drugs, which were marketed as pharmaceut­ical-grade pills, in the fivemonth period between two surgeries, when he experience­d chronic and acute pain. His father said he wants to dispel any myth that kids who use drugs are “bad.”

“My son wasn’t a perfect kid, but he was a kind, gentle, personable boy who had a really good future ahead of him,” Eurchuk said.

His son was looking forward to getting back into hiking, strength training and going back to school in the fall, after a difficult year, Eurchuk said.

Staples described her son as a funny kid who loved reading and puns, rugby, soccer, boxing and hiking.

She said she’d like to see the system change to give parents more agency in decisions about their children’s health.

“You can’t know what you’re doing when you have an addicted brain, and there’s no way a child should be making their own medical decisions when they’re in that state,” Staples said.

Island Health said it will conduct a review of the care Eurchuk received in the health authority’s facilities.

“At Island Health our hearts are broken for the family and friends of this young man,” spokeswoma­n Meribeth Burton said in a statement.

The B.C. Coroners Service confirmed it’s in the “very early” stages of investigat­ing the death of a male teen from Victoria.

A memorial event for Elliot will be held later in the week.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Elliot Eurchuk, above, a Victoria teen who died from an accidental overdose, was ‘a kind, gentle, personable boy who had a really good future ahead of him,’ his father says.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Elliot Eurchuk, above, a Victoria teen who died from an accidental overdose, was ‘a kind, gentle, personable boy who had a really good future ahead of him,’ his father says.

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