Friday, September 5, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page -Fifteen Fridy, epteber5, 975 HE ICHIAN AIL Pag Fitee MAN'S BEST FRIEND? I I Iaws: Do By W. ROBERT WELLER Associated Press Writer Eleven-year-old Greg Wolfram was waiting for his school bus in Las Vegas, Nev., when he was attacked and critically in- jured. Five-year-old Brent Cryder died after being mauled in his back yard near Minooka, Ill. Both were recent victims of what public health officials call* the nation's unrecognized epi- demic: dog bites. And studies in several cities show that more' than half of the epidemic's vic- tims are children. MORE THAN a million dog bites occur annually and last year resulted in at least six deaths, says a spokesperson for the National Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. Gonorrhea is the only public health reported more frequent- ly, according to the Center's records A spokesperson said; bites probably would outnum- ber gonorrhea cases if they were reported as efficiently. Case histories in New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and St. Louis have shown that "in the vast majority of bite cases the' victim was behaving in a social- ly acceptable way in a socially acceptable place," says Alan Beck, chief of New York City's Bureau of Animal Affairs. CITY DWELLERS complain to municipal leaders about "dogs and other pet problems" more than any other issue, ac- cording to a National League of4 Citizens survey published last year. The reported rate of dog bites began increasing rapidly in the 1960s although there's no evi- dence the total dog population increased \ significantly, says Beck. A New York City Public Health Department study notes that bites have risen 33 per cent since 1965 in New York City, and a survey of other cit- ies showed similar increases. The study attributes the in- crease to rising crime and a trend toward larger dogs, some of them attack-trained. "EIGHT YEARS ago adver- tisements for friendly dogs as pets were the only ones shown *... now several pages are de- voted to advertisements of guard dogs. Pictures depicting growling German shepherds and boxers in agressive attitudes predominate," the study says. Bites from large dogs usually are more serious and are more likely to be reported. Big dogs often are more likely to bite be- cause they have been attack- trained or are irritable because they are confined in a yard or house too small for them, the New York study says. In St. Louis, 36.7 per cent of all reported bites were from German shepherds. But that doesn't mean that one breed is responsible for the epidemic. BECK SAYS that German shepherds are popular pets, easy for victims to identify and often are placed in provocative situations. At least two recent fatalities were traced to usually amen- able St. Bernards; the Minooka, l., death involved two Collies and a Labrador retriever. But despite the high incidence of dog bites, concern about the public health implications of the nation's large dog population has focused on dog excrement and its related sanitation prob- lems, Beck says. bite And Beck explained that his surveys of bites in St. Louis and Baltimore found that there were more free-ranging dogs in ghet- tc, low-income areas that had large black populations than in high income areas. Beck says this economic link could mean even more bites if the nation's deteriorating econ- omic situation results in more dogs being left to their own de' vices. THE INJURY: There's more than torn trousers involved in most deported bites. A Phila- delphia Health Department study revealed that 10 per cent of all bites require suturing. The St. Louis study found that one of every 50 hospital emer- gency room admissions resulted from dog bites. A survey of sev- eral other cities showed that figure to be typical. While most bites were on the pets permitted to roam freely develop their own territories and "a stranger walking down such a street risks being bit- ten by an aggressive dog that considers the street his terri- tory." THE INCIDENT: The New York study showed that "the period of the most intense dog- bite activity is between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m., when children are discharged from school, adults return from work, and dogs are walked - many after long hours of confinement in an apart- ment." THE ST. LOUIS study found' that only 2.1 per cent of the bites could be attributed to de- liberate provocation of the dog and that nearly 40 per cent of the victims "did not interact with the dog, its owner, nor the owner's property" in any way. Of the bites that did involve the dog or its owner, playing with the dog, talking with the owner or walking near the own- er's property were the most fre- quent causes of bites in St. *Louis. on SOLUTIONS: The New York study says stricter enforcement of leash laws and "fair but firm provisions for the lawful des- truction of proved ferocious or man-biting dogs" would help re- duce the problem. In many states, the owner "is allowed one or more free bites of a human" before his dog can i be destroyed, Beck said. He adds that in some of those states the dog can be destroyed after its first attack on live- stock. Guy Hodge of the Humane Society's Washington headquar- ters views the problem as one of "owner responsibility." Dog owners must restrain their pets. rise II 11 "WE'VE BEEN focusing on Y11 ,u ULOwyU1LI "WE'VEBEEN focusg on hextremities, nearly 37 per cent the wrong end of the dog,"he of the children bitten in St. says. Beck says dog bite in- Louis suffered bites on the face juries are the "most frequent and neck - both areas where and socially most costly" ele- nearly any bite would be seri- ments of growing health prob- ous. lems related to dogs. Dog bites cost an average of THERE HASN'T been a con- $50 in medical fees and at least firmed case of canine-inflicted as much for the public agencies t abies since 1963 in the U.S., that most deal with them, stu- Beck says. But thousands of dies of case histories in St. bite victims are forced to start Louis and New York indicate. the rabies shots series because That means an annual price tag the dog can't be found in time of at least $100 million nation- to test it for rabies. wide. THE DOG: The dogs involved The dog bite problem has not in these incidents aren't aban- been widely studied, but case doned, public health officials histories in Baltimore, Phila- and the Humane Society say. delphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, The vast majority of them can Norfolk, Va., and New York be traced to owners. THE NEW YORK study warns -- potential dog owners who live tn urban and suburban residen- tial areas that "guard and at- tack trainingta . . often makes a dog unsuitable as a pet be- cause such training puts not lust the would-be criminal, but also the neighbors, the family adnd the owner at increased risk - of dog bite injury." Jse Daily Cicassifieds More than half occurred off the property; five per in school yards. of the bites dog owner's cent of them Beck says a recognition of the problem is the first step toward its, solution. He says that "peo- ple must realize that when a dog bites a man, it is news." ! =, SORCI have helped identify the typica The New York study says bite case: packs of straying pets - more dangerous than wild dogs be- THE VICTIM: Most were chil- cause they aren't afraid of hu- dren like five-month-old Tracy mans - form "in the morning Wax of Kansas City. She was or evening hours, particularly killed Jan. 14 by the family dog, around a female in heat." while her mother was taking a nap. The dog, a mongrel that THE KENDALL County sher- was primarily a Basenji, had iff's office says the Minooka, given birth to two puppies a1Ill., death appears to have in- couple of weeks earlier. volved dogs following a bitch in Nearly two per cent of all heat. children have been bitten. "Chil- The New York study adds that dren and youngsters have close contact with dogs, often handle them roughly, and are prone to approach and pet strange dogs," the New York study says.AL In more than 90 per cent ofAL the cases in St. Louis, the vic- tims were neither the dog own- er nor a member of the owner's family.j FROM five to ten per cent of D all bites occurred while the vic-' tim was working. Six per -ent of all mailmen suffer bites an- nually, Beck says. Beci, who conducted ihe St. Louis Study with Honey Lcring B EK for Washington University's Center for the Biology of Natur- al Systems, says most victims' there were male and black. ; RUS M S METN7:30 p.m.-Mic UITY I G: SEPT. 18 :h. League Ifo -4505 u Put THE DAILY on your doorstep for fall term SU.BSCRIBE NOW Order your subscription now by simply filling out the form below and mailing it to: "The Michigan Daily," 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104. Or call 764- 0558 between 10and 4. 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