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China / Society

Questions raised in autistic boy's death

By Zheng Caixiong In Guangzhou (China Daily) Updated: 2016-05-06 08:30

The parents of a boy who died in a center for children with autism has hired a lawyer to help collect evidence against the institution.

Zhang Wei, mother of Lai Rijia, also hired a local medical institution to conduct an autopsy to find the real reason for her son's death.

He would have turned 4 years old in a month.

Zhang, from Dandong, Liaoning province, sent her son to the Tiandizhengqi center in Guangzhou's Panyu district on March 2. She was informed that he had died on April 27.

The boy suffered from a fever and was pronounced dead after he was sent to a hospital at about 11 pm.

Doctors said Lai had inflammation of the brain; bleeding lungs; and hand, foot and mouth disease. The boy had been unconscious for more than 30 minutes when he was sent to the hospital.

Zhang said her son suffered from light autism and she had sent him to the center after it promised to help cure him.

"The treatment includes marching 10 to 20 kilometers a day," Zhang said.

A training record provided by Zhang showed that the boy participated a 10-kilometer run in the morning and a 9-km run in the afternoon on April 26, one day before his death, Nanfang Metropolis Daily reported on Wednesday.

The center closed on Wednesday and the more than 10 other children were sent home.

Zhang questioned whether the center, which opened in 2013, was qualified to cure autism, because it is registered only as a health center with the local industrial and commercial administration.

Various departments, including industrial and commercial administrations and police, have promised to launch a further investigation.

Zou Xiaobing a senior doctor in children's development at the Third Affiliated Hospital with Sun Yat-sen University, asked why the center could promise it could cure autism through a long-distance camp and field training.

"New methods need to be proven effective before they are used to cure children's autism," Zou said.

Li Xiaofeng, another senior pediatrician at the hospital, said 20 kilometers of camp and field training a day is too heavy for children who are still growing.

"Children under 12 should not run more than 1,000 meters at a time, or their health might be damaged," he said.

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