If something feels wrong — suddenly too drunk, dizzy, confused, or losing control of your body on less than you drank — act immediately. Trust the feeling.
Signs of Spiking
- Sudden extreme drunkenness that doesn't match what you consumed.
- Confusion, disorientation, or difficulty speaking.
- Loss of muscle control — legs giving out, can't hold things.
- Nausea or vomiting that comes on fast.
- Blurred or tunnel vision.
- Feeling paralysed — aware but unable to move or speak.
- Memory gaps starting abruptly.
GHB/GBL is the most common spiking agent in nightlife. Onset is fast (15–30 minutes), and the line between "high" and "unconscious" is razor-thin.
If It's Happening to YOU
Step 1: Tell Someone Immediately
- Tell a friend, bartender, bouncer, or staff member. Say: "I think I've been spiked."
- Do not leave alone. Do not go anywhere with someone you don't fully trust.
- If you're alone, go to the bar staff or security. They deal with this regularly.
Step 2: Get to Safety
- Call someone you trust to come get you.
- If you can't reach anyone: call emergency services or ask bar staff to call.
- Do not drive. Do not walk home alone.
Step 3: Medical Attention
- Go to A&E / the emergency room if symptoms are severe (loss of consciousness, breathing problems, chest pain).
- Tell them you suspect spiking. They can test for substances (most effective within 12 hours — GHB clears the system fast).
- Ask them to take a urine sample for evidence, even if you're unsure about reporting.
Step 4: If You Lose Time
- If you wake up and don't know what happened:
- Do not shower if you suspect sexual contact occurred. (See: Assault Emergency)
- Go to A&E and explain the situation.
- They will offer STI screening, PEP for HIV if warranted, and can collect evidence.
If It's Happening to SOMEONE ELSE
They Are Conscious but Clearly Not Right:
- Do not leave them. Stay with them.
- Get them away from whoever they were with (if it wasn't you).
- Take them to a safe, well-lit area. Bar staff and security can help.
- Do not let anyone "take them home" unless you know and trust that person completely.
- Call a friend or family member to come collect them, or call a taxi and go with them.
They Are Unconscious:
- Call emergency services immediately.
- Put them in the recovery position (on their side, head tilted back).
- Do not try to make them vomit. They could choke.
- Stay with them until paramedics arrive.
- Tell paramedics what you observed and when.
After the Incident
- File a report if you want to. You can report to police and/or the venue. Even if they can't identify who did it, reports help establish patterns.
- Get tested: STI screen and HIV test at 2 weeks, then again at 4–6 weeks and 3 months.
- Talk to someone. Being spiked is a violation. It's normal to feel shaken, angry, or scared afterward. You don't have to brush it off.
Prevention Tips (For Next Time)
- Watch your drink. Cover it, hold it, don't leave it unattended.
- Go out with people you trust. Have a buddy system.
- Agree on a code word with friends that means "get me out of here, no questions."
- Trust your gut. If something feels off, it probably is. Leave.
Related:
- > EMERGENCY: Sexual Assault — if sexual contact occurred while you were incapacitated
- > EMERGENCY: Possible HIV Exposure — PEP access if HIV exposure may have occurred
- > PEP: The Emergency Brake — the full PEP protocol and what to expect