Times Colonist

Oak Bay students remember ‘spirited’ teenager

Parents talk with provincial minister

- CINDY E. HARNETT

The Oak Bay High School community gathered to remember student Elliot Eurchuk.

Elliot, 16, died on April 20 in his Oak Bay home after taking street drugs his parents believe he was using to help him sleep.

Oak Bay High School principal Randi Falls said the school community, friends and family came together for a “memory event … to gain some closure and to help us move forward in a positive way.”

Elliot’s parents, Brock Eurchuk and Rachel Staples, met with Mental Health Minister Judy Darcy to discuss concerns regarding the B.C. Infants Care Act. It allows teens under 19, with a physician’s consent, to make their own medical decisions and keep confidenti­al their healthcare records and treatment.

Elliot’s parents blame their son’s illicit drug habit on addictive painkiller­s prescribed for a series of injuries and postoperat­ive pain, and the provincial law that kept them in the dark.

They have committed to seeing B.C.’s Infants Care Act changed or pressuring the NDP government to support the B.C. Liberals’ Safe Care Act that was reintroduc­ed this year.

“It’s a bill that the former representa­tive for children and youth said allows for the apprehensi­on of vulnerable children and youth whose situation places them at an unacceptab­le level of risk and allows for the subsequent safe placement in a service that will respond to their trauma and high risk of harm,” MLA Jane Thornthwai­te said when the bill was reintroduc­ed in February.

Thornthwai­te, the Opposition’s mental health critic, cited the stories of Elliot and Squamish teen Steffanie Lawrence, 15, as reasons that new short-term legal remedies are needed to help children, in the midst of an opioid overdose crisis.

In the throes of an opioid addiction, Steffanie was allowed to discharge herself from Lions Gate Hospital in January. She didn’t survive to the next morning.

Her parents, who tried to enrol her in a treatment program without her consent, were told by health-care profession­als, police and government officials there was nothing they could do if she chose not to go.

Other jurisdicti­ons, like Alberta, allow parents of young teens to step in and force their children to undergo treatment.

On Feb. 10 at about 1 a.m., Elliot was found in his Victoria General Hospital bed unresponsi­ve and his skin blue in colour, hours after returning from a pass.

The next morning, his parents were barred from any medical informatio­n about what drugs their son took and his treatment plan.

“I could not force my Elliot into treatment and, like Steffanie’s story, Elliot’s ending was preventabl­e,” Staples said.

Parents also struggle with the fear that if they force treatment, their children will run away.

“We need to be able to save our children,” Staples said. “They need the care and treatment whether they know it or want it. We need to be able to be parents. Two beautiful souls lost because of our province’s laws. Better to have them in treatment than plan their funerals.”

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