I was dreading watching that programme. I was quite surprised that the overall message was 'People need to know what's in their drugs'. Her boyfriend apparently died because his cocaine contained de-wormer. BZP has been called a de-wormer, which it is obviously isn't. Like when people talk about rat poison in drugs. Warfarin thins the blood of humans and helps prevent heart attacks and strokes. It kills rats. Just because it's rat poison, it doesn't mean it's human poison. I'd need to watch it again, in order to add some proper feedback. It was better than the other BBC3 drug programmes. They've definitely improved, the rest have been awful. I liked that it basically said 'know what you're taking'. I can't believe those people were snorting fat lines of aMT and necking other things. Drug use is definitely on the rise and education is the best approach to prevent deaths. Will our government implement a harm reduction scheme, similar to other countries? No chance. The tried and tested illegal drugs are far better (and probably safer) than anything legal that I've had. Anyway, overall, not a terrible programme. I want to know what she took, it looked fun. It also looked like blatant advertising. The BBC told the nation that there's a new drug coming out, that even a Radio One DJ will take, despite the fact she no longer takes drugs, and she wanted more. I can't think of a drug that causes pleasurable effects that you don't want to redose on. If it releases dopamine, like a lot of drugs do, you will probably want more.