One pill was all it took for 18-year-old Anthony Hampton to end up in a hospital, barely able to speak or move.
Just weeks after graduating from high school, the Calgary teen was looking to buy pot with some friends, his parents said. When the teens couldnât get marijuana, they opted for what they believed was oxycodone.
But Calgary Police say the pill Hampton took was likely laced with fentanyl, a potent painkiller blamed on a recent spike in overdoses.
Hampton was rushed to hospital on July 17, after his mother found him unresponsive in his bed.
Pat Forgio said her sonâs hands, feet and lips were blue. The pill he took, she said, âcompletely stopped his heart.â
Hampton was in a coma and on life support for several days before he started showing signs of improvement.
âFrom all accounts, he tried this once,â said the teenâs father, CTV journalist Reg Hampton. âHe just tried this pill that he thought was oxy, one time.â
Hamptonâs parents are speaking out because they want to warn others about the dangers of fentanyl.
Last Sunday alone, police in Vancouver responded to 16 fentanyl-related overdoses.
And according to the , more than 650 Canadians have died from fentanyl-related overdoses between 2009 and 2014.
âIt can happen to anyone,â Reg Hampton said. âAnthony wasnât a drug user, really. Yeah, he had the pot and stuff, but this was a one-time mistake.â
A veteran journalist, the teenâs father has covered stories about drug use. Still, heâs struggling to understand why his son took such a chance.
âI keep saying to myself, âI should have just had one more conversation with him,ââ he said.
Tests show that Hampton suffered extensive brain damage. While he has made progress in hospital, a full recovery is not guaranteed.
âMaybe weâll get our Anthony back,â his father said. âWe just donât know.â
With a report from CTVâs Vancouver Bureau Chief Melanie Nagy