Ketamine's return, according to the survey, is most prominent at universities in Bristol, Manchester, Liverpool, Brighton, and Newcastle—all cities well known for having historically high levels of ketamine use. More than half of the students surveyed at the University of the West of England in Bristol name ketamine as their university's "favorite drug." The survey found most students were paying between £20 and £29 [$29 and $41] for a gram of ketamine, more than the pre-drought price of £15 [$21] but less than the £30 to £50 [$43 to $71] being charged during the shortage.This is all a far cry from springtime in 2014, when ketamine supplies started drying up, just as the drug was spiking in popularity in Britain. Out of nowhere, ketamine became hard to source, deals were heavily cut, underweight, and triple the usual £15 [$21] gram bag price.Users of online drug forums despaired, with people posting messages like this one: "I've been looking at my living room for the past three weeks, and it's just been normal. When is this going to end?"Anyone boasting to have sourced some cheap ketamine that wasn't cut with its research chemical alternative, MXE, was immediately swamped by a deluge of PMs. There were maudlin pleas on Twitter, parody sites posting about fake charities set up to help drought sufferers, and the inevitable angry Hitler reaction video.
Nancy Lee, who died after years of ketamine abuse at the age of 23
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