The provided content is from a single outlet that publishes an article with guidance on how to recognize possible cocaine use in friends or family. The piece emphasizes the idea that there are observable “signs” that may indicate someone is using cocaine, though it does not provide detailed, independently verifiable evidence within the text shown here. It also references a celebrity, Barry Keoghan, who has publicly discussed past cocaine use, using this example to support the article’s theme of openness about drug use. Across the two duplicated entries supplied from the same outlet, the framing and wording are the same: the article suggests that detecting cocaine use is “obvious” and lists purported indicators. However, the excerpts provided do not include specific medical or clinical criteria, nor do they cite external experts or studies. Based on the available text, the story centers on informal, general advice rather than reporting new incidents, official findings, or specific cases.