Edmonton school tries to protect students after overdose hits close to home - Action News
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Edmonton school tries to protect students after overdose hits close to home

After a recent graduate overdosed on carfentanil, an Edmonton high school is trying to protect its students from deadly opioids that have killed hundreds of Albertans in recent years.

'You're playing Russian roulette,' school resource officer warns high school students

'It's a different world now'

7 years ago
Duration 1:52
An Edmonton high school is trying to protect students from deadly opioids that have killed hundreds of Albertans in recent years.

CalumWhytockwas 18 when he drankcodeinelaced withcarfentanilat a house party in April anddied within seconds.

His mother,MioaraWhytock, remembers visitinghis building that night to find flashing lights and a police officer running into her son's apartment.

"He was dead already," she said about her only child.

"I miss him so much I can't breathe sometimes ...I loved him with all my heart."

Mioara Whytock's son, Calum Whytock, died of a carfentanil overdose in April. (Trevor Wilson/CBC)

Whytockjoined students at Mother Margaret Mary High School on Tuesday for a drug-safety presentationby two school resource officers.

Her son graduated from the school in spring of 2016.

The Edmonton high school is trying to protect students from deadly opioidsthat have killed hundreds of Albertans in recent years.

As the officers talked about her son, Whytock sobbed in the crowd. She had planned to shareCalum'sstory, but said she couldn't bring herself to do so.

Calum Whytock overdosed on carfentanil in April 2017. (Edmonton Catholic Schools)

"I would have told them, trust your parents," she said to CBC News after the event. "If you have a problem, go to them and tell them. They're going to do everything to help you.

"I would have done everything,everything for my son. I would have given my life for him just to help him."

'You're playing Russian roulette'

Const. Brandon Myhre, the school's resource officer, keeps a framed photograph of CalumWhytockin his office.

Myhre said every weekend he worries another student will overdose on fentanyl or carfentanil.

"I treat these kids as my own children, so I can't even imagine how I would feel if that was to happen," Myhre said.

Const. Brandon Myhre is the school resource officer at the Mother Margaret Mary High School in Edmonton. (Trevor Wilson/CBC)

During Tuesday's presentation, he asked those who knew Whytock to stand. Dozens of students and teachers rose from their seats.

"It's a different world now," Myhre said."You're playing Russian roulette. "Our street drugs have been laced with fentanyl, and people, for the first time of going and doing drugs, are dying."

Nearly 1,000 people in Alberta have died from fentanyl-related overdoses in the past six years, according to Alberta Health statistics.