On February 28, 2016, the website Nachrichten365.info reported on a baby who was with her father for just an hour and then had to be flown to the nearest hospital with shaken baby syndrome.


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However, what looks like strong clickbait is at least based on one truth:

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Source: nachrichten365.info

The message:

8 months after Cheyenne's birth, her father shook her so hard that her skull fractured and bleeding occurred in her brain. The reason for this was that the girl didn't stop crying.

An excerpt from the message:

The horror news on site: Your daughter will forever be in need of care and will remain in a vegetative state: “While I was crying, I was shaking and vomiting, I asked God to save her and take me instead. When I got to her hospital bed, she was covered in bandages, there were IVs everywhere, and her leg was black from a blood clot. Then my phone rang and it's the police: "James, Cheyenne's father, confessed to shaking her."

In a word: stunned. I think that best describes how this message makes the reader feel.

Not current - but still true

Although the report has been picked up in some quarters in recent days, this incident dates back to 2012. Her father had Cheyenne in care on Friday, August 17, 2012. He was sentenced on April 29, 2013 to 10 years in prison with 5 years probation.

Prayers for Cheyenne Rae

After the incident, Cheyenne's mother created a Facebook page for her daughter and continues to run it to this day.

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Source: facebook.com/PrayersForCheyenne

With this page, Amy would like to draw attention to the consequences of baby shaking syndrome. Although Cheyenne recovered well, the chances of survival were not very good. Today Cheyenne is a happy and well-developed child.

What is shaken baby syndrome?

Shaken baby syndrome is a result of child abuse in which babies often suffer invisible injuries due to rough shaking/shaking by supervising persons, but shaken baby syndrome can also result from the (unfortunately) popular throwing of the baby. The neck muscles are not yet stable in the first year of life and cannot withstand these games.

The most common cause is shaken baby syndrome, which, according to a conservative estimate, occurs between 100 and 200 infants each year. Because injuries are often hardly visible on the outside, many cases are not even recognized. This also applies to broken bones: “We estimate that up to every second broken bone in the first year of life is a result of child abuse,” explains Fitze. But diagnosing abuse is often a difficult and delicate matter.

(Source: DGKCH )

Conclusion:

Even though the actual incident took place in 2012, the report is certainly true.
We don't know whether we should simply draw attention to it again or whether the site operator ran out of reports.

Author: Marvin, mimikama.org

Notes:
1) This content reflects the current state of affairs at the time of publication. The reproduction of individual images, screenshots, embeds or video sequences serves to discuss the topic. 2) Individual contributions were created through the use of machine assistance and were carefully checked by the Mimikama editorial team before publication. ( Reason )