Few information is circulating about Michael Schumacher. Hospitalized since his skiing accident on December 29, 2013 in Meribel, the 50-year-old German driver would receive treatment in Paris, the Parisian newspaper Le Parisien reported on Monday (September 9th).

The seven-time Formula 1 World Champion has been transferred to the Georges Pompidou European Hospital in the Cardiology Surgery Continuous Monitoring Unit of Professor Philippe Menasché, a pioneer in cell therapy for the treatment of insufficiency. heart ". Contacted by AFP, the Paris Public Assistance-Hospitals (AP-HP) has "neither confirmed nor denied" this information which "falls under medical secrecy". The entourage of the pilot did not confirm either.

"Schumacher should leave the hospital on Wednesday"

Michael Schumacher "benefits from infusions of stem cells that are distributed in the body to obtain a systemic anti-inflammatory action, that is to say throughout the body," says Le Parisien. "The treatment should start this Tuesday morning, the patient to leave the hospital in principle Wednesday," said the newspaper, according to which the German "would have made at least two passages at the European hospital Georges-Pompidou, last spring ".

At the beginning of December 2018, Jean Todt, president of the International Automobile Federation (FIA) and former boss of Schumacher at Ferrari, revealed to the German newspaper Bild that he had seen him at his home in Gland (Switzerland) on the weekend of Brazilian Grand Prix.

"In the best hands"

"Schumi" was injured in the head during a ski crash on December 29, 2013 in Méribel. Helmeted, he was accompanied by his 14-year-old son Mick. Descending at low speed, he falls head first, because of a rock, between two marked trails. Since there is no information on his state of health, but in the opinion of renowned neurologists, the German pilot, technically out of a coma, is necessarily in a vegetative state.

On the occasion of his 50th birthday, on January 3rd, his family, very discreet, published a declaration on Facebook. "You can be sure that he is in the best hands and that we are doing everything humanly possible to help him," she said.

With seven F1 world championship titles and 91 Grand Prix victories between 1991 and 2012 (with a first sporting retreat from 2007 to 2010), the German, nicknamed the "Baron Rouge" at the time of his exploits with the team Ferrari, is the most rewarded driver in the history of his discipline.

With AFP