The pop singer Demi Lovato was hospitalized in Los Angeles after suffering an apparent drug overdose on Tuesday.

"Demi is awake and with her family who want to express thanks to everyone for the love, prayers and support," Lovato's rep told Business Insider in an emailed statement.

The spokesperson said some of the information previously reported about Lovato's condition was "incorrect," but did not offer any further clarification — instead asking for "privacy and not speculation" on the family's behalf.

Multiple news outlets reported Lovato was sent to the hospital around noon PT on Tuesday. People and Variety both reported Lovato was in "stable" following the apparent overdose, citing anonymous sources.

According to TMZ, paramedics initially found Lovato unconscious at her home and treated her with Narcan, a drug used for opioid overdoses.

“LAPD and LAFD responded to a medical emergency at the 8000 block of Laurel View Dr. at 11:40 a.m.” the Los Angeles Police Department told People. A rep for the Los Angeles Fire Department also said to People that they had “transported a 25-year-old female patient to a local hospital.”

Lovato, 25, has publicly struggled with substance abuse and an eating disorder during her career, and had previously done stints in rehab starting in 2010.

In a song titled "Sober," released earlier this summer, Lovato seemed to sing about relapsing after six years of sobriety.

“Momma I’m so sorry I’m not sober anymore / And Daddy please forgive me for the drinks spilled on the floor,” Lovato says in the song. “To the ones who never left me, we’ve been down this road before / I’m so sorry, I’m not sober anymore.”

“I’m sorry for the fans I lost, who watched me fall again / I wanna be a role model, but I’m only human,” she continues.

In a documentary called "Simply Complicated," released in October by YouTube, Lovato said she started using drugs at 17, and spoke about a time she nearly overdosed on a combination of cocaine and Xanax.

“I started to choke a little bit and my heart started racing,” she said in the doc. “I remember thinking, 'Oh my god, I might be overdosing right now.'”