Students at a prestigious all-boys boarding school in the UK had to be treated by paramedics last week after taking a suspected 'bad batch' of Ecstasy pills.
Staff at £37,350-a-year ($64,500) Harrow School in North West London were forced to call for paramedics after the three boys complained of feeling unwell, the Daily Mail reported.
The teenagers are believed to have purchased 20 Ecstasy tablets from a drug dealer in the nearby town centre before heading back to their house where they later took the pills before collapsing at around midnight.
One of the pupils at the school had to be rushed to Northwick Park Hospital while the other two were treated at the scene.
It is understood that one of the pupils has now left the 260 acre school.The sixth-form students, all aged about 17, have now been suspended from the school following the incident last Wednesday.
A source told The Sun: "The boys went into Harrow town centre last Wednesday night and bought 20 pills from a dealer.
"They took some but they are thought to have been a bad batch of Ecstasy and they all became ill.
"There was a major panic and staff and the matron were called.
"They called an ambulance as there were serious concerns about one of the boys. He was taken to hospital where he was treated and initially detained for observation."
The school, where students are required to wear straw boater hats, has previously faced criticism for a drug culture at the school.
"The boys were all suspended by the head Jim Hawkins and the board of governors were informed," the source added.
"One of the boys has now left the school and a decision will be taken at some point on what to do with the other two boys.
"The school takes a firm stance on drugs these days but will be loath to wreck a young boy's education because of one mistake."
A London Ambulance Service spokesperson said: "We were called to reports of an incident at an address on High Street, Harrow.
"We sent an ambulance crew to the scene. We treated a patient and took them to hospital."
A spokeswoman for the school said: "Our policy is to protect the privacy of our pupils and we do not comment on individuals."