Few things
are more frightening than being attacked
by a dog. Such an attack can leave the
victim severely injured and traumatized.
If the victim is a child, the injuries
can be fatal. Many states have statutes
which hold the owner of the dog strictly
liable for the dog’s behavior if the attack
is unprovoked; that is, the victim did
nothing to threaten the dog or cause it
to attack in self-defense. It makes no
difference where the attack took place
or if the attack is the first for the
animal. In some states, the dog gets “one
free bite”, meaning the owner is not presumed
to know the dog is dangerous until an
attack has occurred once.
As an owner, there are steps you can take
to minimize the possibility of your dog
attacking someone:
• Spay or neuter your dog
• Do not teach your dog to play roughly
• Be sure your dog has up-to-date vaccinations
• Take your dog to obedience classes so
it becomes accustomed to obeying voice
commands
• Never leave babies or small children
with a dog unless there is an adult with
them
• Keep your dog in a fenced yard, do not
allow it to roam
Basic safety tips include:
• Leave strange dogs alone
• Never approach any dog while it is eating,
sleeping, or caring for puppies
• Never try to pet a dog until you have
let it see you and smell you
• Never leave children alone with any
dog
• Never be aggressive with a dog, stare
it in the eye, or run from it
• If a dog does attack, stay still
• If a dog knocks you down, roll into
a ball to protect yourself
• If you are attacked, seek help quickly.
Try to find out who the owner is, but
seek medical help first. |