The issue is that whatever he was actually using it for and even if he was using it legitimately, the public opinion of ketamine is so negative that that’s all that will be remembered. Plus 99% of people will just read the headline. It’s so sad.
TrueThe issue is that whatever he was actually using it for and even if he was using it legitimately, the public opinion of ketamine is so negative that that’s all that will be remembered. Plus 99% of people will just read the headline. It’s so sad.
Could be...but it could also be he got hooked on it and talked himself into thinking because he was getting it from the doctors, that meant it was a 'safe' drug to use.It says that ket can used after opioid use though for recovery? So was he using it to stay clean and just took too much?
I wonder if he 'doctor shopped' until he found one who was willing to treat him.I understand that Ketamine therapy has been life changing for a lot of people, but I'm still shocked that it would be prescribed to someone with a history of such severe addiction. It just feels like a terrible idea, and I'm not surprised this is how it ended.
Edit: Spelling
Or more likely, he had a stash of ketamine acquired from non official avenues and used it at home.People seem to be saying his last ket infusion was a week and a half before his death, which would seem to suggest that it wasn't that ketamine that killed him since it only stays in your system a few hours?
Ketamine only has a half life of a few hours or so, so it suggests that he was taking it himself at home. Whether this was to self medicate, or recreational, we'll probably never know.People seem to be saying his last ket infusion was a week and a half before his death, which would seem to suggest that it wasn't that ketamine that killed him since it only stays in your system a few hours?
Maybe I was confusing in my wording, what I meant was not that he didn't die of ketamine but that the last infusion he had (if it's true that it happened a week and half prior) couldn't be the specific thing that killed him.Or more likely, he had a stash of ketamine acquired from non official avenues and used it at home.
He was receiving ketamine infusion therapy but the ket found in his system wasn’t from the therapy as that was a week previous. So he had some at homeMaybe I was confusing in my wording, what I meant was not that he didn't die of ketamine but that the last infusion he had (if it's true that it happened a week and half prior) couldn't be the specific thing that killed him.
He didn’t intend on drowning which is what killed him.Not sure how they can rule it accidental when he had such a high level of it in his blood.