Canadian swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey says she was drugged on the final night of the 2022 World Aquatics Championships, last month in Budapest.
"Staff have been in contact with Mary since her return and we are offering her support. "I ended up going to the hospital, where I was met with doctors & psychologists. She does not address how it might have happened.
Canadian swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey said she woke up "completely lost" with "dozens of bruises" on her body at last month's World Championships.
SWIMMER Mary-Sophie Harvey has claimed she was DRUGGED during the final night of the World Championships in Budapest last month. The Tokyo Olympian,
“Thank you to the people that helped me while I was vulnerable for those who've reached out since then. “I'm still scared to think about the unknowns of that night. and I wish someone had educated me on the matter prior to that night. Some of my friends told me afterwards that they had to carry me while I was unconscious and it probably explained why. “The next day, I travelled back home and had dinner with my family. “On the last night of the Worlds Championship, I got drugged.
Canadian swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey has said she was drugged at the world championships in Budapest and blacked out for up to six hours. The 22-year-old, who ...
I'm still scared to think about the unknowns of that night." The UK government has set up a new working group to stamp out the "heinous" issue and every university has been asked to introduce a policy to tackle spiking by the end of the year. The swimmer opens up about her experience on social media, saying she feels ashamed and that she's scared "to think about the unknowns of that night".
Canadian Olympic swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey claimed that she was drugged on the final night of the 2022 World Aquatics Championships.
The Canadian team went on to the final, where Harvey was replaced by another swimmer. She also competed in the Pan American Games in 2019, where she took home three silver medals and one bronze. "I ended up going to the hospital, where I was met with doctors and psychologists.
Canadian swimming star Mary-Sophie Harvey wrote on Instagram she was drugged while she was at the World Aquatics Championships in Hungary.
and I wish someone had educated me on the matter prior to that night." Some of my friends told me afterwards that they to (carry) me while I was unconscious and it probably explained why. "At the time I wasn’t aware of what got inside of me, I just remember waking up the next morning completely lost; with our team manager and doctor at my bedside.
Mary-Sophie Harvey says a 'four-to-six hour window where I can't recall a single thing' left her with a concussion and rib sprain.
“I’m still scared to think about the unknowns of that night,” she wrote. “It felt like the body I was in, wasn’t mine [it still feels this way]. I got home and found a dozen bruises on my body,” she wrote. There’s been a dangerous increasing number of cases reported throughout the years but it is still not being talked about enough.
World governing body FINA is investigating Canadian swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey's claim that she was drugged at last month's World Championships in Budapest.
"They tested and treated me the best way they could. "I called one of my good friends knowing her mum was a doctor, so they could guide me a little. "The next day, I travelled back home and had dinner with my family.
In an Instagram post, Mary-Sophie Harvey opened up about the emotional and physical toll of the drugging.
In a Wednesday Instagram post, Canadian swimmer Mary-Sophie Harvey revealed that she was drugged while attending a world championship in Budapest. The Olympian says she was out celebrating on the final night of the tournament when she was drugged and sustained a concussion as well as a rib sprain. In the post, Harvey, 22, says that there is a “four-to-six-hour window where I can’t recall a single thing” and reveals that she felt “ashamed” the next morning. The swimmer highlighted the prevalence of drugging—the last page of her Instagram slideshow features screenshots of articles about spiking drinks—but said that she is remaining focused on her text competition.