Belgian Triathlete Falls Ill With E Coli After Individual Race In Seine, Scratches Mixed Relay

Belgian triathlete Claire Michel has been taken to the hospital after becoming ill. The team’s mixed relay for tomorrow has scratched as Michel has had to withdraw.

According to the Belgium news outlet, De Standaard, Michel is sick after becoming infected with E. Coli. Michel was one of 55 women to dive in the Seine River for the women’s triathlon this past Wednesday. She finished 38th overall.

Team Belgium released a statement saying:

“The BOIC and Belgian Triathlon unfortunately have to announce that the Belgian Hammers will not start in the Mixed Relay competition at the Paris Games tomorrow. This decision, as well as the communication about it, was taken in consultation with the athletes and the entourage.

Claire Michel, one of the athletes in the mixed relay team, unfortunately has to withdraw from the competition due to illness.

Claire Michel is a member of both the BOIC and World Triathlon Athlete Commissions. As an athlete representative, she is committed to continuously evaluating and improving conditions for athletes.

The BOIC and Belgian Triathlon hope that lessons will be learned for future triathlon competitions. We are thinking of training days that can be guaranteed, competition days and formats that are clear in advance and circumstances that do not cause uncertainty among athletes, entourage and fans.”

The Seine River had high levels of pollution leading up to the triathlon events as training sessions were canceled the Sunday and Monday before the race. In addition, the men’s race, originally scheduled for Tuesday, was pushed back to the same day as the women’s events due to poor water quality caused by bacteria such as E. Coli. E. Coli levels have been high in the Seine River, including 10x too high just over a month before the Olympics began.

The triathlon events from this past Wednesday had water qualify test results “very close to the threshold of triathlon”Aurelie Merle, the Paris 2024 Director of Sports said.

The open water swimming events are also scheduled to take place in the Seine later this week with the women’s 10km race scheduled for Thursday and the men’s 10km race on Friday. The triathlon notably had a much shorter swimming portion of only 1.5km.

World Aquatics notably has different acceptable limits for E.Coli and other bacterial levels compared to World Triathlon:

World Aquatics requirements for inland waterways:
● Enterococci score: <200 is Excellent; <400 is Good; >400 is Unacceptable
● E. Coli score: <500 is Excellent; <1,000 is Good; >1,000 is Unacceptable
World Triathlon requirements for inland waterways:
● Enterococci score: <200 is Excellent; <400 is Good; <330 is Sufficient
● E. Coli score: <500 is Excellent; <1,000 is Good; <900 is Sufficient

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Swimmer
12 hours ago

This is the first reported one we’ve heard of and there’s likely more to come especially if they use it for open water. Once the games are over they will say it is no longer safe to swim in. The city should be sued for negligence they’ve put the health of so many athletes at risk

George Steele
14 hours ago

The Seine is an open sewer. The concentration of animals in cities is very high compared to natural averages, and there is no oxygenating rapids or turbulent flow. Runoff is not controllable by public health authorities. It’s NUTS to have a swimming competition in a river that runs through a city like this.

Kristiina Allekõrs
20 hours ago

In Seine competed over 100athletes and only one ilness person. Good job France. Raini days only is not enough stable..

Dan
Reply to  Kristiina Allekõrs
14 hours ago

There have been more, at least 1 more – from Sweden – plus it would need to be reported in media and for SwimSwam people to find it or have it reported to them.

Sly
22 hours ago

The incubation time for E-coli contamination is 3 days.
The race was 4 days ago, and the Belgian team says she’s been unwell for 4 days.
It’s very unlikely that she was contaminated by the river

ooo
Reply to  Sly
20 hours ago

If this is the case then the contamination came in the village (assuming the Belgian team stays there, unfortunately for them) and then it is even worse.
The tone of the release makes it rather clear that the Seine is the likely culprit. Now that we know that a plan B does exist for open water, it would be judicious to use it.

Fred
Reply to  Sly
20 hours ago

From the Mayo Clinic. “Signs and symptoms of E. coli  infection usually begin three or four days after exposure to the bacteria. But you may become ill as soon as one day after exposure to more than a week later.” Note the comment AS SOON AS ONE DAY. It was extremely likely due to the river.

CavaDore
Reply to  Sly
14 hours ago

Incubation to infectious symptoms is not always an exact science, my friend. You’re splitting hairs here with 4 days versus 3 days.

Big Swimmy
1 day ago

They had the surfing in Tahiti. But the triathlon and open water swimming just had to be in the Seine…

Chlorinetherapy
1 day ago
AtP
1 day ago

Wait till they see the LA river….

Openwaterfan
Reply to  AtP
17 hours ago

Ocean (Long Beach) for LA so different circumstances then a river and honestly better then the Paris location as the chosen location is constantly used for open water and triathlon competitions.

Awsi Dooger
1 day ago

During the women’s road cycling race on Sunday they used many overhead shots of the Seine. It was unbelievable how filthy it looked or that it was used for anything during these Games.

About Anya Pelshaw

Anya Pelshaw

Anya has been with SwimSwam since June 2021 as both a writer and social media coordinator. She was in attendance at the 2022, 2023, and 2024 Women's NCAA Championships writing and doing social media for SwimSwam. She also attended 2023 US Summer Nationals as well as the 2024 European Championships …

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