Boy, 13, dead after TikTok ‘Benadryl Challenge,’ grieving dad warns other parents - TikTok's gotta be the worst social media

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An Ohio teen tragically perished after overdosing on over-the-counter medication while attempting a viral TikTok stunt.

The 13-year-old victim, Jacob Stevens, had been partaking in the “Benadryl Challenge,” a dangerous pursuit in which participants take 12 to 14 of the antihistamines — six times the recommended dose — in order to induce hallucinations.

The potentially deadly stunt started blowing up in 2020 as teens uploaded their attempts on TikTok in order to gain social media clout.

Jacob’s father, Justin, told ABC 6 that his son was at home last weekend with friends when he overdosed.

Footage taken by his pals showed the Columbus resident downing the pills, after which his body reportedly started to seize up.

“It was too much for his body,” the teen’s devastated father said.

Jacob was subsequently rushed to the hospital and put on a ventilator.

Despite medics’ best efforts, the boy perished six days later on what his father described as the “worst day of his life.”

Justin described hearing the devastating news that his son wouldn’t wake up.

“No brain scan, there was nothing there,” the bereaved dad said. “They said we could keep him on the vent, that he could lay there — but he will never open his eyes, he’ll never breathe, smile, walk or talk.”

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Jacob Stevens, 13, spent six days on the ventilator before dying.

The boy’s grandmother, Dianna Stevens, fought through tears to tell their local TV news outlet: “I’m going to do anything I can to make sure another child doesn’t go through it.”

Meanwhile, Jacob is remembered by his family as a well-mannered, funny, loving kid.

“It didn’t matter how bad of a day I was having, no one could make me smile, Jacob could make me smile,” an emotional Justin recalled.

In light of his son’s tragic death, the devastated Ohioan is also warning parents about the dangers of teens using social media unsupervised.

“Keep an eye at what they’re doing on that phone,” he said. “Talk to them about the situation. I want everyone to know about my son.”

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Jacob Stevens in happier times. “Keep an eye at what they’re doing on that phone,” his dad warns other parents. “Talk to them about the situation. I want everyone to know about my son.”

In addition, Justin is imploring lawmakers to put age restrictions on over-the-counter pharmaceuticals like Benadryl — a campaign he describes as his “life goal.”

He wants TikTok to impose similar safeguards, including requiring users to provide an ID before creating an account.

Unfortunately, Jacob isn’t the first victim of the Benadryl Challenge.

In August 2020, a 15-year-old girl fatally overdosed on the allergy drug during another ill-fated attempt at the stunt.

Following the spate of deaths, manufacturer Johnson & Johnson issued a public advisory regarding the challenge, warning: “The Benadryl TikTok trend is extremely concerning, dangerous and should be stopped immediately.”

The Food and Drug administration also put out a public service announcement.

“Taking higher than recommended doses of the common over-the-counter (OTC) allergy medicine diphenhydramine (Benadryl) can lead to serious heart problems, seizures, coma or even death,” the agency wrote.

“We are aware of news reports of teenagers ending up in emergency rooms or dying after participating in the ‘Benadryl Challenge’ encouraged in videos posted on the social media application TikTok.”

They added, “Health care professionals should be aware that the ‘Benadryl Challenge’ is occurring among teens and alert their caregivers about it.”

Ticktock — time could be running out for the teens of TikTok​


The juggernaut viral video platform announced major changes for under-18 users in March, with a one-hour daily screen time limit set to be introduced in the coming weeks in an effort to curb endless scrolling that some argue is turning youths into “boring beasts.”

The goal is to rein in the way teens interact with the increasingly popular — and controversial — app.

The new restrictions came two days after the White House ordered government agencies to rid their devices of the Chinese-owned TikTok app within 30 days in an effort to prevent China’s communist government from spying on US citizens.

“We believe digital experiences should bring joy and play a positive role in how people express themselves, discover ideas, and connect,” said Cormac Keenan, TikTok’s head of trust and safety, in a statement. “We’re improving our screen time tool with more custom options, introducing new default settings for teen accounts, and expanding Family Pairing with more parental controls.”

The new 60-minute time limit will be automatically applied to every user under 18 years of age, who will be asked to enter a passcode to continue scrolling after an hour.

For users under 13, the limit will also be set to 60 minutes — but a parent or guardian will need to set or enter an existing passcode to enable 30 minutes of additional watch time.

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Look I'm not claiming to have been an angel. At his age I had drank a few beers, smoked, fingered some fat chick, all the white trash cliches.

That being said there's a decent chance he would have died doing something stupid before 18 anyways. Anyone who does something like this was clearly not that bright in the first place.

When I was growing up, everyone and their brother knew about "those kids" who sniffed airplane glue and abused other legal highs. They also saw those kids ruin their lives.

Did people just stop talking about that weirdo down the street that huffs gasoline and would tell their kids to stay the fuck away from him?
 
I've gotten high off Benadryl a lot of times, 12-15 pills is a regular dose for a medium/light trip on a large adult male. Poor kid probably followed some shit online, could have been sensitive to the drug, or even just unlucky.
It's really weird seeing the dumb shit I did as an edgy teen become more well known the past year or so, I'm convinced that the young kids are desperate for any high and that social media people know how to exploit that for clicks.
 
I've gotten high off Benadryl a lot of times, 12-15 pills is a regular dose for a medium/light trip on a large adult male. Poor kid probably followed some shit online, could have been sensitive to the drug, or even just unlucky.
It's really weird seeing the dumb shit I did as an edgy teen become more well known the past year or so, I'm convinced that the young kids are desperate for any high and that social media people know how to exploit that for clicks.
Why not just save money and huff paint? Or full rama rama and use diesel.
 
Probably by not doing that.
good luck trying to convince women of being stay at home moms instead of empowered independent career womyn in current year lol

Where. The. Fuck. Were. The. Parents.
at work

Holy fucking shit, if we ever caught our kids doing stupid shit from the internet we'd beat them within an inch of their miserable lives. Fuck. We both grew up on the internet, I grew up steeped like a teabag in the shittiest parts of the web and I'm a 90% functioning adult and I yet I realize. I wouldn't be here if I did 1/10th of the stupid shit I came across in the early days of the internet, like fucking WinMx era internet.
current year internet is a very different beast than the 2000s internet you probably grew up in, and current year kids interact with it in a very different way than kids did back then
 
One baby dose of Benadryl and I'm a zombie. I don't even want to know how bad 14 pills will make you. I imagine you just never wake up.

Stop letting your kids on TikTok unsupervised. I don't want to have to start showing my ID for allergy medicine because kids are taking entire boxes of Benadryl to feed the viral content farm.
 
"grab your dad's handgun and blow your brains out" challenge
There was one where people pointed loaded firearms at themselves and fired them. Most of those were empty but there were cases were the teens didn't know jack shit about firearms and did not check if it was loaded.

A particular sub-challange consisted on teens pointing a pistol at their genitals and pressing or playing with the trigger. I do believe someone might have deleted their cock and balls by doing that.

Edit: Here's a Brandon Herrera video where he shows the challenge of dudes pointing pistols at their junk on tik-tok. The clip starts 9 minutes into the video.
 
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One baby dose of Benadryl and I'm a zombie. I don't even want to know how bad 14 pills will make you. I imagine you just never wake up.
For an adult, 350mg is going to make you delirious and hallucinate and have killer cottonmouth. Probably no appreciable liver damage if you don't do it repeatedly. And not the fun kind of hallucinations, I'm talking swarms of spiders and demons.

Diphenhydramine is one of the worst choices for a recreational drug I can think of aside from maybe datura.
 
I'm guessing he drew the lucky number for torsade de pointes.
Benadryl usually comes in 25mg tablets. Maximum daily dose is 300mg, or 12 tabs. Twice the maximum dose (600mg, 24 tabs) would fuck you up pretty bad, but wouldn't kill you unless a drug reaction or rare side-effect happened.

So either they're lying about how much he took or he was unlucky and it caused a seizure/irregular heartbeat.
 
Kids should not have smartphones. Any online interaction should be made via the family computer or their parents'. They should not have free unsupervised acces to the internet. There is nothing online for kids that their parents can't also see they are using. Kids have no right to "privacy" about internet access.

This is not the kid's fault (not entirely), but the parents for thinking their child should have a cellphone and society for enabling and "normalizing" this behavior.
 
I sometimes triple dose just to try and sleep. I'll think better of that now I guess.
It's not so much a once in a while high dosage that becomes dangerous, it's the continued daily high use that makes you go to the ER. This can be said for all drug use, like long-term high dosages of acetaminophen (Tylenol) can cause liver damage on par with an alcoholic's liver.
 
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