A British mother of three died at a remote retreat in the Bolivian Amazon rainforest after allegedly drinking tea laced with the psychedelic drug ayahuasca.
Maureen Rainford, 54, a social worker from Romford, in Essex, had paid £800 ($1545) for a 10-day stay last month at the Ayahuasca and San Pedro Pisatahua Retreat.
The secluded eco-lodge describes itself as a “sacred space” to “work with plant medicines, including ayahuasca” and an “ideal environment to heal, expand consciousness, and connect with the wonders of the Amazon”.
Rainford’s daughter Rochel, 32, said staff at the retreat told her that her mother had suffered a “medical emergency”.
Other witnesses said that 10 minutes after drinking the ayahuasca tea, Rainford had complained of feeling unwell and then her heart and breathing rate plummeted.
Staff tried for an hour to resuscitate her but she died before the doctor arrived, the family were told.
Ayahuasca is a plant-based psychedelic that can cause a person to hallucinate. It is registered as an illegal class A drug in Britain.
The bitter beverage, made from brewing leaves and stalks from two local plants, has been long used by the indigenous tribes in South America for medicinal, spiritual and ceremonial purposes.