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Injuries and deaths caused by non-human primate attacks: Paediatric vulnerability.

Chittaranjan BeheraMohit ChauhanAsit SikaryTabin MilloRoger W Byard
Published in: Medicine, science, and the law (2020)
A six-month-old girl was taken from her mother's lap by a macaque monkey (Macaca) that had entered the room through an open door. The monkey escaped with the infant but subsequently dropped her from a rooftop terrace. Death occurred soon after impact with the ground, and was found at autopsy to be due to blunt cranio-cerebral trauma with skull fractures and intracranial haemorrhage. Monkeys and apes may cause a variety of serious and potentially life-threatening injuries and may manifest quite unpredictable and aggressive behaviour around humans. The very young are particularly vulnerable to primate attacks, and 'baby theft' by apes and monkeys is an event that has now been reported, albeit rarely, in a number of different countries around the world. The fatally injured infants have died from bites, falls and drowning. Chimpanzees in the wild may also specifically hunt human infants for food.
Keyphrases
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  • induced pluripotent stem cells
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  • risk assessment