Pubdate: Fri, 2 Oct 2009 Source: Daily Herald-Tribune, The (CN AB) Page: 1, Front Page Copyright: 2009 Osprey Media Contact: http://www.dailyheraldtribune.com/feedback1/LetterToEditor.aspx Website: http://www.dailyheraldtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/804 Author: Remo Zaccagna Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) ONE BAD CHOICE COST HER LIFE Before moving to Grande Prairie from the Vancouver Island city of Nanaimo, Darren Steinke and his sister, Heather Work, would often get stern lectures from their mother about the dangers of doing drugs. As an employee of Edgewood, an addiction rehabilitation centre in Nanaimo, their mother understood through her experiences there that doing drugs is a gamble - except the user never wins and everyone, including family and friends, loses. It's why Steinke, 29, cannot understand why his 25-year-old sister decided to take an ecstasy pill the night of Sept. 11, which ultimately led to her death two days later. "Because of (our mother) we've always grown up anti-drug, she was always anti-drug and for whatever reason, she decided to try ecstasy," he said. On Sept. 11, a Friday, Steinke was in Whitecourt visiting his twin brother. Work was at her home in Grande Prairie's east-side Creekside neighbourhood with her husband, four-year-old daughter and two-year-old son. According to Steinke, it wasn't long after taking the pill that Work developed arrhythmia, and blood stopped flowing to her brain, causing it to start swelling. She began coughing up blood, and then "she collapsed in her kitchen at about 3 a.m." Saturday morning he got a call from one of Work's friends that she was in the hospital in a drug-induced coma and he immediately returned to Grande Prairie along with his brother. Their parents flew in from Nanaimo. After attempting to control the swelling in her brain by cooling her body temperature, doctors informed the family early on the Sunday morning that there was no neurological activity and that she was most likely clinically brain dead before she arrived at the hospital. "That's how quickly it happened (after ingesting the pill)," Steinke said. A toxicology test confirmed there was no evidence of alcohol or any other drugs in her system, Steinke said. However, he also said it is unknown at this time if the ecstasy was laced with any other chemical that may have played a part in her sudden death. "It's hard to tell," he said. "They don't know, and that's one of the dangers of ecstasy." Immediately following Work's death, a decision was made to fly her body to the University Hospital in Edmonton where everything from her bones, tissue, bone marrow, eyes, and organs - except for her heart, which was not salvageable following the overdose -were harvested for donation. Steinke said a total of 71 people received something from his sister and four had their lives directly saved because of her. "Actually we just found out that there's a 10-year-old girl that had four days to live that is now living and breathing and has a chance at life because she has Heather's lungs in her," he said. "And there's another little girl somewhere in Alberta that is seeing right now because she has Heather's eyes." It's an outcome that Steinke said his sister, who gave so much of herself to her family and friends in life, would have wanted in death. "Even after death she continued to give and that's something special. So we as a family feel really good," he said. "And with the tragedy of death, there's so many negatives that you look for the positives and that is one of the positives that we can hold on to." Nevertheless, the past three weeks have been "horrific" for the entire family, and particularly for Steinke, who described Work as more than his sister. She was his neighbour, confidante, and best friend. "I saw her every day. I left my door unlocked, so she would come over and take whatever she needed, and we were very, very close. We always talked. She's very close to my mom and dad; she'd talk to my mom three, four, five times a day," he said. "I can't explain what it's like to lose a sibling, I can't even imagine what it's like for my parents to have to bury their child." Yet if he had one regret it's that "we all took our relationship with her for granted in a non-selfish way. We just always expected she'd be there the next day." Steinke spent two weeks with his family in Nanaimo and upon his return to Grande Prairie began preparing a celebration of his sister's life for those who knew her. It will be held tomorrow. After that, Steinke plans to take what he has learned from his sister's death and try to impart it to local students. "In high school I heard the 'don't do drugs' speeches, but I think I can hit home a little bit with this one," he said. "The message I want to get across is ... it hasn't happened to you, and you might be at a party one night with that pill in your hand and think 'I've done this 100 times, it's not going to happen to me.' "It does happen, and it happens quickly and it happens unexpectedly. "Heather was a very healthy 25-year-old, and that was the first time she tried ecstasy, and that was all it took - one tablet." He said he wants people to think about the consequences of their actions "And I'll tell them: If they can look in my eyes and see my pain, and see my hurt, if they can get a glimpse of it, it would give them pause," he said. "If I can get one kid to hesitate and put that pill back in his or her pocket, then I'll feel like I've accomplished something." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake