15-year-old’s suspected drug overdose likely involved hydromorphone and cough medicine, RCMP say | CBC News

15-year-old’s suspected drug overdose likely involved hydromorphone and cough medicine, RCMP say | CBC News


RCMP say a 15-year-old has died of a suspected drug overdose in Campbell River, B.C., believed to involve the prescription opioid hydromorphone and cough medicine.

Const. Maury Tyre with the Campbell River RCMP says in a statement that it’s important for youth and parents to understand the risks posed by both prescription and non-prescription medications.

The statement says an investigation into the teen’s medical emergency led police to believe it was caused by a combination of Dilaudid, a brand name of hydromorphone, and non-prescription cough medicine.

A bottle labeled dilaudid, a pharmaceutically made version of hydromorphone, is open with white pills in the lid, on a counter.
Dilaudid, a medication that provides those addicted to opioids a safe supply of the drug, sits on a counter in Wellness Pharmacy Abbott in Vancouver on July 25, 2023. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Dilaudid is available as a prescription medication, including as a safer supply drug that is provided as an alternative to toxic street drugs. However, as of  February 2025, people who rely on prescription opioids such as hydromorphone must now take those safer supply drugs under the supervision of a pharmacist.

Tyre says the type of tragedy that claimed the teenager’s life can affect people from all walks of life, “sometimes through addiction, and sometimes through experimentation.”

RCMP offered condolences to the family and friends of the youth and say no further details will be released.

British Columbia’s then-chief coroner, Lisa LaPointe, said in 2023 that hydromorphone was not involved in “significant” numbers of drug deaths.

The B.C. Coroners Service does not provide regular data on drug deaths related to hydromorphone, but instead lists them among deaths related to non-fentanyl opioids.

Those opioids have been related to about 20 per cent of all drug deaths in recent years, before dipping to about 17 per cent last year. 


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