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DOG OWNERSHIP LAWS FAIL TO CURTAIL FATAL ATTACKS http;//www.idir net/-wolf2dog/Anicle2.htm <br />DOG OWNERSHIP LAWS FAIL TO CURTAIL FATAL <br />ATTACKS <br />The Washington Post, Tuesday, June 11 1996; Page Z05 <br />Laws that restrict the ownership of certain breeds of dogs but fail to address <br />the actions of their owners are likely to be ineffective in reducingthe number <br />of fatal dog attacks, according to a study by federal health officials published <br />in the current issue of the journal Pediatrics. Physician Jeffrey J. Sacks, an <br />injury prevention specialist at the Centers for Disease Control and <br />Prevention, and his colleagues analyzed data from 109 deaths caused by <br />dog bites reported between 1989 and 1994. Using data compiled by the <br />National Center for Health Statistics and the Humane Society of the United <br />States, Sacks and his team found that while certain breeds of dog, most <br />notably pit bulls. Rottweilers and German shepherds, are more often involved <br />in fatal and non-fatal attacks, the problem is not confined to those animals, <br />because many breeds bite. Fifty-seven percent of Americans killed by dogs <br />were under the age of 10. In 11 attacks an infant less than 4 weeks old was <br />killed while sleeping in a bed or crib. <br />California, Texas and Illinois had the largest number of fatal attacks, while six <br />states reported no dog bite deaths. There were more fatalities in the South <br />than in any other region and fewest in the Northeast. The majority of attacks <br />involved one dog, while 6 percent involved three to seven. In attacks on <br />children between the ages of 1 and 9, 45 percent involved an unrestrained <br />dog on the owner’s property; 29 percent occurred when a child wandered too <br />close to a chained dog. <br />Of the 41 fatal attacks in which there was detailed information about the <br />animal, 25 involved a male dog, of which 20 were unneutered. Many dogs <br />involved in fatal attacks had a history of previous aggression. Reducing the <br />number of dog bites, the authors note, may require guidance from <br />pediatricians as well as more stringent animal control laws that target <br />"chronically irresponsible dog owners." Dog bites, they write, are a major, <br />largely overlooked public health problem that has received far less attention <br />than playground injuries. <br />Parents should be instructed by pediatricians to choose a dog carefully and <br />to have it neutered to reduce aggressive tendencies. Infants and young <br />children should never be left alone vwth an animal, regardless of the breed. In <br />addition, parents should be told that aggressive games such as wrestling or <br />getting an animal to "sic" are potentially dangerous. <br />Children should be taught never to approach a strange dog. never to play <br />with a dog unless supervised by an adult and to avoid direct eye contact with <br />1 of2 3^5/00 8 26 AM