Thursday, June 5, 2025

When the System Fails ADHD Youth

 “Another Preventable Death: When the System Fails ADHD Youth”

James Beik-Fowler had ADHD. He also had a mother who never gave up on him. For over a decade, Heather Fowler pleaded with health professionals, police, and social services for support. She knew her son was in danger. And still, the system let him fall — again and again — until he disappeared, only to be found dead over a year later in an abandoned North Vancouver pub.

His story is not unique. It is just one of many, hidden behind acronyms and diagnoses: ADHD, PTSD, OD, MIA. But what these letters really spell out is abandonment.

How Did We Get Here?

  • ADHD, especially when undiagnosed or untreated properly, can leave individuals vulnerable to addiction, impulsivity, and unstable relationships.
  • Parents, even when they fight tirelessly, are often blocked by privacy laws and professionals who don’t witness what happens at home or on the street.
  • Doctors and psychiatrists can prescribe powerful medications, sometimes in cocktails that would terrify most parents — yet are rarely around to see the daily side effects, emotional crashes, or long-term impacts.
  • And when a youth starts to spiral — there are few safe places to catch them. Mental health beds are scarce. Supervised consumption sites are non-existent in many communities. Shelters are full.

Why Was He Alone?

Heather said James was involuntarily hospitalized multiple times. But then released — again and again. That’s the cycle in B.C. and across Canada: short stays, brief stabilization, and then discharge back into the same unstable conditions. This is not care. It’s a revolving door.

The question we all need to ask is: How many drugs was he given before he became homeless? How many side effects went ignored? How many housing forms, support referrals, or mental health petitions were denied? How many signs did we all miss?

Time for Accountability

We need:

  • A reform of the Mental Health Act to allow families more say, especially in long-term planning.
  • Proper wraparound services for people with ADHD and co-occurring conditions.
  • Supervised consumption sites and housing-first programs in every community.
  • Medical accountability for drug interactions, diagnoses, and decisions that lead to homelessness and overdose.

Heather Fowler did everything she could. Her son is gone. But her voice — and James’ story — must spark change.


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