Indiana mother wants son to return to school after reporting vaping illness led to his expulsion

SPENCER, Ind. -- Just a few months into his freshman year, a student at Owen Valley High School said he was expelled for seeking help after having a bad reaction to vaping.

Kegan Houck felt dizzy Sept. 30. His vision was blurry after smoking from a friend's vape in the school restroom.

"I was constantly thirsty, and then I got to a point where I threw up," Houck said.

Worried something was really wrong, Houck went to the school nurse and told her what happened. He was taken to the hospital via EMS with his oxygen level at 70%.

Doctors diagnosed Houck with pneumonitis — lung inflammation — caused by vaping. The hospital reported it to the CDC, and he became part of the growing statistic, with 41 confirmed cases of vaping-related illnesses in Indiana, 56 probable cases, and three deaths.

Houck said he didn't know what was in his friend's vape.

"I thought it was just nicotine because that's what is mostly in vapes," he said.

However, according to the school district, it tested positive for THC oil, so the school decided to expel him indefinitely.

"How are we supposed to tell our children, 'If you have a medical problem, even it is smoking a vape in school,' and I understand he did wrong by doing that, but we are teaching them, 'Don't go to the school officials. Don't go to the nurse, because you could get in trouble,'" Kegan Houck's mother, Shannon Houck, said.

His mother wrote an appeal letter to try to get him back into school, but her efforts were unsuccessful.

"It's a true nightmare," she said. "We've been through enough, to be honest with you. We, as parents, have been through enough. He's been enough. This is important. This is the most important years of his life."

Spencer-Owen Community School Superintendent Chad Briggs said he could not comment on specific students, but the school system has rules that specifically address possession or use of tobacco products, including vapes, that lead to expulsion.

It is illegal for people under 18 to use vape products, and the Indiana State Department of Health said schools set their own policies in regard to vaping guidelines.

Houck's family was hopeful administrators would reconsider, though.

"He's missed long enough of school," Shannon Houck said. "We need to be back in school."