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Recovering from surgery: Little Qingqing, who is just ten weeks old, has bandages around her damaged face
A baby girl has been badly disfigured in a dog attack at home after her parents left her by herself while they worked in nearby fields.

Ten-week-old Qingqing is currently in a critical condition in hospital in eastern China, following emergency surgery to repair her mauled face.

Her mother told the People's Daily Online: 'We left after our baby girl fell asleep. Who knew this would happen?'

The woman, named only as Ms Li, said that on the day of the attack, she and her husband fed their daughter then went to work near their house in Haimen City, eastern China.

But Ms Li could not stop thinking about her daughter so returned home after just ten minutes.

When she arrived, a white dog with blood around its mouth came running towards her, she said.


She dashed to the bedroom where she had left Qingqing - and discovered that the little girl had been dragged from her bed by the dog, which is believed to be a stray.

Ms Li said: 'I nearly fainted. My baby girl was lying face flat on the floor, with blood all over.'

The right side of Qingqing's face had been shredded and her eyelid torn off. She was carried to a local clinic by her mother but her injuries were too severe to be treated there.

She was then transferred to the larger Nantong City No.3 People's Hospital, where she was operated on. She is recovering from the surgery but is suffering from a fever that is concerning her doctors.

Her plastic surgeon, Dr Sun Jiyie, said: 'This is the youngest child with the most severe injuries we have seen from a dog bite.

'If she could safely power through the critical period, we will be planning more plastic surgery. But she is so young and the injuries are so severe, the operations will no doubt be very difficult.'

Mrs Li, who is keeping a vigil at her daughter's bedside, said she and her husband only recently moved to Haimen after working at a greenhouse farm in another province for three years.

Last night Dr Zhao Xianzhong, the director of the hospital's burns and plastic surgery department, reminded all parents never to leave their babies and children alone.

He also issued a general warning about dogs - saying attacks in China are more common in spring and summer.

The hospital currently treats around 20 people a day for dog bites but the figure is expected to increase in the coming weeks as temperatures rise.

'When summer arrives, people wear less fabric, and dogs are only interested in exposed skin,' explained Dr Zhao. 'Girls should be more aware when they are wearing short skirts and shorts.'