Dustin attended the prom with his girlfriend, Cameron, 13 days before his death.
Every day, Lisa Manning walks past the bedroom where her 18-year-old son, Dustin, died of an accidental opioid overdose last May. Although the room is a constant reminder of the terrible morning when her husband found Dustin slumped over on his bed, she can’t bear to move out of their Lawrenceville, Georgia, home.
“Part of me thinks he’s still here, I guess,” she says. “I’d feel like we were leaving him if we moved so soon.”
Paramedics weren’t able to revive Dustin when they arrived on the scene. And less than an hour later, they received another emergency call from a half mile away. Joe Abraham, 19, a childhood friend of Dustin’s, was unresponsive in his bedroom, dead from an unrelated opioid overdose.
The fate of the two teens offers a grim glimpse into the worst drug addiction epidemic ever to grip the United States: the opioid crisis. Opioids are a class of highly addictive drugs that includes prescription pain relievers such as OxyContin, as well as the illegal drug heroin (see "Opioid at a Glance" sidebar, below). The deadliest opioid—the one that killed both Dustin and Joe—is a painkiller called fentanyl. It’s so powerful that ingesting an amount equal to a few grains of salt can be fatal.
Last May, Lisa Manning’s 18-year-old son, Dustin, died of an accidental opioid overdose. She walks past his bedroom every day. The room is a constant reminder of the terrible morning when her husband found Dustin slumped over on his bed. But she cannot bear to move out of their Lawrenceville, Georgia, home.
“Part of me thinks he’s still here, I guess,” she says. “I’d feel like we were leaving him if we moved so soon.”
Paramedics were not able to revive Dustin when they arrived on the scene. And less than an hour later, they received another emergency call from a half mile away. Joe Abraham, 19, a childhood friend of Dustin’s, was unresponsive in his bedroom. He died from an unrelated opioid overdose.
The fate of the two teens offers a grim view into the worst drug addiction epidemic ever to grip the United States: the opioid crisis. Opioids are a class of highly addictive drugs. They include prescription pain relievers such as OxyContin. They also include the illegal drug heroin (see “Opioids at a Glance” sidebar, below). The deadliest opioid is a painkiller called fentanyl. That drug killed both Dustin and Joe. It is so powerful that taking an amount equal to a few grains of salt can be fatal.