Do not let shame or fear of legal trouble stop you from calling for help. A person's life is worth more than embarrassment.
Step 1: Call Emergency Services
- Call your local emergency number NOW (112 in Europe, 999 in UK, 911 in US/Canada).
- Say: "Someone has collapsed / is not breathing / is unconscious. I think they've taken [substance if known]."
- Give your exact location. Stay on the line.
In many countries, Good Samaritan laws protect you from prosecution when you call for help during a drug emergency. Even where they don't—call anyway.
Step 2: While You Wait
If They Are UNCONSCIOUS but BREATHING:
- Recovery position: Roll them onto their side (not their back).
- Tilt their head back slightly to keep the airway open.
- This prevents choking on vomit — the #1 cause of death in GHB/alcohol ODs.
- Stay with them. Do not leave them alone. Monitor their breathing.
If They Are NOT BREATHING:
- Start CPR if you know how. Chest compressions: hard and fast, centre of the chest, 100–120 per minute.
- If you don't know CPR: the emergency operator will talk you through it. Stay on the line.
- If you have naloxone (Narcan) and suspect opioids: administer it now. It cannot harm someone who hasn't taken opioids.
If They Are SEIZING:
- Do NOT hold them down or put anything in their mouth.
- Clear the area around them so they don't hit anything.
- Time the seizure. Tell the paramedics how long it lasted.
Step 3: What to Tell the Paramedics
Be honest. They are there to save a life, not arrest anyone.
- What was taken (GHB, meth, MDMA, poppers, pills — whatever you know).
- How much (approximate).
- When (how long ago).
- What else was mixed (alcohol, other drugs, ED medication).
- Any known medical conditions.
Specific Dangers to Know
| Situation | Key Risk | Immediate Action |
|---|---|---|
| GHB + Alcohol | Respiratory failure — they stop breathing | Recovery position. Call ambulance. Do NOT try to wake them with cold water. |
| Meth + chest pain | Heart attack / cardiac event | Call ambulance. Keep them still and calm. Do not give stimulants. |
| Poppers + Viagra/Cialis | Severe blood pressure drop, fainting | Lay them flat, elevate legs. Call ambulance if they don't recover in 1–2 minutes. |
| Any stimulant + overheating | Hyperthermia / heatstroke | Cool them down (remove clothing, cool water on skin). Call ambulance. |
After the Crisis
- You did the right thing by getting help. Whatever happens next, you chose someone's life.
- If chemsex situations keep going wrong, talk to someone — a sexual health clinic, a drugs counsellor, or a chemsex-specific support service. No judgement.
Related:
- > Lethal Combos: The Math That Kills — the specific drug interaction risks and why they happen
- > Chemsex: Harm Reduction — the full harm reduction protocol for chemsex sessions
- > EMERGENCY: Drink Spiking — if substances were given without consent