Oriental Net, May 8th news: According to the Oriental Morning Post report, yesterday afternoon at around 2 PM, an infant died of full-body shrinkage after being injected with a vaccine. The diagnosis stated it was due to hypersensitive constitution. In Yixian Road, Yangpu District, a shocking event occurred when a boy in the third year of junior high school got into an argument with his father and took drastic action: he grabbed a fruit knife and stabbed his own abdomen. His panicked parents quickly sent their injured son to the hospital for treatment. After medical treatment, it was found that the boy had a 5-centimeter long stab wound on his right side, but fortunately, no internal organs were damaged. Currently, the boy is still in the hospital receiving inpatient treatment. It is understood that the boy is in the third year of junior high school and will soon face the high school entrance exam. Yesterday afternoon, in the hospital emergency room, the injured boy lay on the bed, closing his eyes tightly with a look of pain, feeling low-spirited while his anxious parents accompanied him by the bedside. Medical records show that the boy is 16 years old and lives in Yixian Road No.288. We learned from the hospital that before the incident, the boy had an argument with his father at home for unknown reasons. Soon after, the argument escalated, and the boy, who was in adolescence, grabbed a fruit knife from the house and stabbed himself in the abdomen, causing blood to gush out and soak his clothes. His worried parents then called 120, and subsequently, the ambulance sent the boy to the hospital for treatment. Regarding the cause of the argument, the boy's parents in the hospital were unwilling to disclose any information. According to an informed source, the boy is currently in the third year of junior high school and will soon face the high school entrance exam. The hospital stated that the boy’s right abdomen was injured, but the internal organs are unharmed; however, he still needs to be hospitalized for observation and treatment. (Edited by SN026)