After an officer found a pulse on the child, the boy was transported to a hospital, the report stated. Officers suspected the parents, Charles Dowdy and Danielle Simko, of narcotics use; drugs and syringes were found on the property, according to the report.

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Dowdy told police that he and Simko had been in bed with their son when he noticed that the child’s lips were turning blue, the report said.

In audio from a 911 call from the incident, a man’s voice — presumably Dowdy’s — is heard alternately pleading frantically with the dispatcher and shouting at a nearby woman.

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“Please hurry,” the man tells the dispatcher, before yelling “Move! Move!” to someone else in the home.

The dispatcher begins to coach the couple on how to perform CPR on the unresponsive boy.

“I think he was sleeping and I think what happened was he rolled over and I don’t think he could breathe,” the man explains to the dispatcher. “I think he was just, like, in the pillow and he suffocated.”

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In the 911 call, the man tells the dispatcher that the unresponsive boy is his 7-year-old son. However, a police report that lists the child’s birth date indicates the boy is 8.

Once at the hospital, staff discovered prescription pills and a small bag of heroin tucked inside the boy’s sock, according to cleveland.com. Dowdy admitted to police that he had used drugs inside the house earlier that day, and both he and Simko were arrested at the hospital, the news site reported.

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Dowdy and Simko were charged with child endangerment, records show, and each were held on $150,000 bond. They were arraigned in court on Friday and will appear at a pretrial conference on Feb. 22, according to court records.

Cuyahoga County has been among the hardest hit in the nation’s opioid epidemic. Earlier this month, the Cuyahoga County medical examiner announced that there had been at least 46 confirmed fatal overdoses in January from heroin, fentanyl or a combination of the two. The deaths were evenly divided between residents of Cleveland and those who lived in the suburbs.

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In 2016, at least 517 people in the county died from overdosing on heroin, fentanyl or combination of the two, the medical examiner said.

Earlier this month, Berea police shared a video about “the reality of drug use” from the nonprofit group Drug-Free World on the department’s Facebook page.

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“There is no city in this country that is immune to drug problems, and Berea is no exception,” the department wrote. “The scenes in this video will be all too familiar to the families who have a loved one suffering from a drug addiction.”

The department encouraged people to share the video and talk to their children about what they were doing.

“We work with our law enforcement partners in this county to combat the drug problem, but we can’t do it alone,” the department wrote. “Law enforcement and the community must work together to fight this epidemic.”