Sedric McClure was hopeful after walking the halls of Maple Grove Hospital with his son, Elijah, who had been admitted with chest pain and nausea that had a suspected link to vaping. Dragging an IV pump and laboring for breath, his 21-year-old son had resolved to quit the habit after he got out of the hospital.
Then came the panicked call from his son at 2:30 the next morning, Aug. 30.
"Dad," McClure recalled his son saying. "They're taking me into the ICU. They're going to put a tube down my throat."
The young adult is one of as many as 450 people across the nation with suspected or medically confirmed cases of vaping-associated lung injuries. The outbreak this summer has been linked to at least six deaths, and has sent otherwise healthy teens and young adults into intensive care. Minnesota has reported one death and 35 confirmed or probable cases.
Father and son haven't been able to speak since that frightening phone call, as Elijah McClure was placed on mechanical ventilation to take over for his injured lungs and moved to the intensive care unit at North Memorial Health Hospital in Robbinsdale.
Which leaves Sedric McClure with many questions. Why was his son still vaping? Was he using over-the-counter nicotine cartridges or mixing in off-the-street concoctions? And when would his lungs gain enough strength that the former football and basketball star could breathe on his own?
While he waits for answers, McClure said he wants everyone to know his family's story — risking personal humiliation and criticism over his lack of awareness of his son's vaping — so that other parents can talk to kids, and kids can get over the misconception that vaping is a harmless alternative to cigarettes.
"It shocked me to my core to watch a relatively healthy young person go through so much pain," he said.