Kent Messenger Maidstone

News from around the county Channel swimmer whose heart stopped wakes up

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A Channel swimmer whose heart stopped beating while he was training near Dover Beach has woken up in hospital.

Steve Fish, who prides himself on being fit and has undertaken 10 triathlons, had to be rescued from the sea after going into cardiac arrest on Sunday.

He was training as part of an organised cross-channel swim group when he got into difficulty near the Dover Sea Sports Centre.

Emergency services were called at 12.30pm after Mr Fish was spotted struggling in the water.

Paramedics performed CPR before taking him to hospital.

Steve’s son Thomas Fish says his father’s near-death ordeal came as a huge shock.

Thomas, who works as a waiter in Tunbridge Wells, said he was alerted to the emergency by his stepmother, Tania, who had been in Berlin at the time and flew back to be by her husband’s side.

The 17-year-old described the trauma the family went through waiting to see if Mr Fish would wake up.

“On the first few nights he was on life support, but now he is stable in a cardiac ward,” he said.

“Now that he is better we are able to get a decent night’s sleep for the first time since it happened.”

Mr Fish, from Folkestone, has never swum the Channel before, but his triathlons have involved him swimming 2.4 miles, cycling 112 miles, and running a marathon, one after the other.

On Tuesday a woman Channel swimmer had to be rescued and taken from her pilot vessel after suffering sunstroke.

She had become unwell about 11 miles from Dover with temperatur­es reaching 34C.

Dover Coastguard had asked the port’s RNLI to go out to help at about 9am.

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 ??  ?? Dover Beach and, right, Steve Fish moments after he woke up, with son Thomas, wife Tania and his mother Betty
Dover Beach and, right, Steve Fish moments after he woke up, with son Thomas, wife Tania and his mother Betty
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