B.C. grief camp says more families seeking help due to drug crisis

A charity that supports families through grief says it is seeing first-hand the impact of B.C.’s drug crisis.

Lumara said it has seen a five-fold increase in the number of people seeking help after losing a loved one to drugs and staff say they are struggling to keep up with demand.

Sue Blom-Cadotte’s daughter Maaika died of a drug overdose in December 2021 when she was only 17 years old.

Blom-Cadotte and her family turned to a grief and bereavement camp put on by Lumara, which is a small B.C.-based charity.

She said it changed her and her youngest daughter’s lives.

“She met other kids there that were the same,” Blom-Cadotte said

“I feel like it’s hard as a parent but as a kid navigating through this, not knowing anybody else who has lost a parent or sibling, it’s hard.”

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Lumara provides music, therapy and a variety of activities at the camp but staff said they are seeing a five-fold increase in families seeking help due to the drug crisis.

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“I wanted to create a place where people could go after a significant loss,” Heather Mohan, the executive director of Lumara told Global News.

“Four years ago one in every 18 or 19 families would come to us with a drug-related death and now we’re looking at one in every three or four referrals.”

According to the BC Coroners Service, there has been a steady rise in toxic drug deaths over the last few years in people under 39.

Lumara operates solely on grants and donations.

There is one four-day camp in B.C. this week and another in Ontario in October, but out of 100 applications, only 34 families were accepted.

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“For me, it’s connection, connection with other people who have gone through the same thing,” Blom-Cadotte said.

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