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Brevard mothers speak out about drug overdoses and fentanyl deaths

Nancy Shine's only child had just turned 26. And it was just one pill.

But one night, Keaton Alan Shine decided to take fentanyl.

It cost Keaton his life – and changed his parents’ lives forever.

Keaton Alan Shine was only 26 when he took fentanyl and died.

“He was my son and my only child,” said Nancy Shine of Cape Canaveral. “It's heartbreaking. I'll never be a grandmother … I have to live the rest of my life (with this loss). We have to live the rest of our lives without our son. I don't want any other parent to have to go through this.”

This is one of the reasons for the fourth annual Mom Anon Overdose Awareness Day, which takes place on Saturday.