Two teen twin sisters collapse in UK park after allegedly using spiked vape
Two 13-year-old twin sisters were rushed to the hospital after allegedly being given a vape laced with dangerous drugs at a park in Hull, East Yorkshire.Scarlett and Olivia Bywood reportedly met a group of girls from another part of town in April and were handed what they believed was a normal vape. Within minutes, both teenagers collapsed unconscious, while one of the girls was said to have started foaming at the mouth.According to a report by The Sun, their mother, Kay Fores, 37, said the twins were found unconscious in a local park after the other children allegedly fled the scene. A neighbor spotted the girls and called emergency services.The teenagers were taken to Hull Royal Infirmary, where doctors later confirmed through blood tests that the vape had allegedly been spiked with MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy, and spice, a synthetic cannabis.Kay said she was left devastated after arriving at the hospital to find both daughters unconscious and connected to IV drips.“It took six hours for them to wake up,” she said, adding that doctors warned the situation could have turned fatal if the girls had not been discovered quickly.One of the twins reportedly suffered a head injury while the other was left with a black eye following the collapse.The girls were discharged from the hospital the following day but were reportedly unable to remember anything about the incident.Their mother has since spoken out to warn other parents and teenagers about the dangers of accepting vapes from others.The incident comes amid growing concerns over the rise of drug-laced vapes in schools across England. A 2025 study by the University of Bath found that up to one in four vapes confiscated in some secondary schools contained spice.Researchers analyzed more than 1,900 e-cigarettes and vape liquids collected from schools across England and warned that synthetic drug-laced vapes were becoming increasingly common among teenagers.Kay said she planned to report the matter to police and urged young people never to use unfamiliar vapes, warning that “the next person could be dead.”















