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He died alone of a drug overdose. His mother wants to save others from the same fate

The mother of a 20-year-old man who died of a suspected drug overdose Saturday says she wants immediate, serious changes to how Newfoundland and Labrador deals with addictions.

Ben Olivero, 20, died in St. John's on Saturday

Woman holds flowers and picture of boy
Tina Olivero holds a picture of her son, Ben, at a public memorial in his honour. (Malone Mullin/CBC)

Tina Oliverohad just watched her son come back from the brink.

But hours after he left the hospital, revived by naloxone and treated for a suspected opiate overdose, she found police crouched over him, wrestling in vain to save his life once more.

Ben Olivero, a six-foot-six "gentle giant," as his mother putit, died in the early hours of Saturday morning, behind some bushes in a small park on New Gower Street in St. John's.

"He died by himself,"said Olivero, losing her fight against tears in an interview Wednesday, just steps from where her son took his final breaths.

"I can't believe he left this world alone."

Benis one of at least 11 people to succumb to drug overdoses in the last month in Newfoundland and Labrador. Harm reduction advocates say at least some of the recent deaths are likely due to fentanyl contaminatingdrugs like cocaine.

Olivero, now telling her story in the hopes of saving others,believes that's why Ben died.

"All I could think about was, 'I got to stop this.' What would Ben want me to do? He would want me to stop this," she said.

A boy with red hair smiles
Ben Olivero, pictured here as a child, had wisdom beyond his years, his mother says. (Submitted by Tina Olivero)

For six years, she says, she'd done all she could to get Ben treatment. But after each stretch of sobriety, he fell back to old patterns, unable to resist thepull. First pot. Then pills. Then needles.

"It was a freight train coming," Oliverorecalled.

"His brain was hijacked.It wasn't his fault. He was not capable of making a decision. Just like a dementia patient is not capable. They're different diseases, but it's the same outcome."

Olivero's warning comes just days after the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary warned that fentanylwas in the province to stayand might be seen in greater amounts. Harm reduction workers told CBC News last week they're hearing reports of the synthetic opioid from front-line workers. The Department of Health, meanwhile, said Monday that it's handed out hundreds of naloxone kitsand ordered hundreds more for safe measure.

For Olivero, that's not enough.

She's hoping to see legislative changes to privacy laws that could grant family members more control over treatment of their loved ones. She'd like to see it called Ben's Law something akin to the Mental Health Act which could prevent people with addictions from causing harm to themselves.

WATCH: Tina Oliverorecalls finding her son after a lethal overdose:

She lost her son to a drug overdose. Now she's telling his story

1 year ago
Duration 2:03
Tina Olivero lost her son Ben to a drug overdose on Saturday, just days after the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary warned of an influx of fentanyl in the cocaine supply.

Ben's death opened her eyes, she adds, to a shadowy underworld of suffering.She says she's received 600 messages from parents grappling with the very same heartbreak, watching their children deal with addiction, unable to find a solution that sticks.

"This is way bigger than COVID-19," she said.

"We shut down the whole entire country for COVID-19. And this is a drug epidemic that everybody's turning away from."

As Oliverospeaks, a young couple approach Ben's memorial.An array of candles, photos and flowers are spread on the park bench where Ben used to sit. They hug his mother and begin to cry. They knew him, too, as gentle and generous, they said.

"It's a human right not to be cast into the streets and judged as an addict," Oliverosaid.

"And that's what we need to fight for, in the same way that we've begun to fight for mental illness."

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