Nearly a quarter of dog bite hospitalisations children
under 5
10.09.2004
Source: The New Zealand
Herald-
Children aged four and
under account for nearly 24 per cent of the cases of hospitalisation for dog
bite injuries in this country, researchers from the Dunedin School of Medicine
found.-
In an article in the
New Zealand Medical Journal published today the three researchers said dog bite
injuries were a significant public health problem.
They estimated there
were 3025 hospitalisations, and one fatality, as a result of dog bite injuries
between 1989 and 2001. A further 94 hospitalisations were estimated to have
resulted from people being struck by a dog, rather than bitten.
The incidence of dog
bites had increased until 1996, following an increasing trend identified in an
earlier report between 1979 and 1988, the researchers found.-
A decrease for three
years after 1996 could be due to the public responding to publicity about dog
control at the time, along with the introduction and enforcement of strict dog
control law in 1996.-
The researchers were
unsure how much a higher incidence recorded in 2000 and 2001 was the result of
a real change in risk, or of the way data was recorded.
Ongoing monitoring was
needed to determine if dog control policies were having the intended effect,
they said.-
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During the 13-year
study period 9450 hospital inpatient days had resulted from dog bite injuries.
Three days had been the mean hospital stay, with 56 days the longest.
- --
The article was written
by PhD student Louise Marsh, injury prevention research unit director John
Langley, and senior lecturer in health policy Robin Gauld -- all from the
Dunedin School of Medicine's department of preventive and social medicine.
- --
They found that the age
group with the most hospitalisations as a result of dog bite injuries was
children under five -- with 23.8 per cent of cases. The second most
hospitalised group was those aged five to nine, accounting for 15 per cent of cases.
Males made up 60.5 per
cent of the hospitalisations.
The one death during
the study period was the only fatality from dog bites identified in this country
from 1979, the article said.
That was consistent
with other developed countries where death due to dog bites had been very rare.
High rates of
hospitalisation among children could probably be explained by their lack of
physical strength or motor skills to ward off an attacking dog, the article
said.
Immaturity and lack of
judgment might sometimes lead children to act in ways animals perceived as
threatening or aggressive, and it had been suggested children under five were
more likely to provoke animals than older children.
Parents of injured
children might be more likely to seek medical attention, and young children and
victims with head injuries might be more likely to be admitted to hospital than
other groups.
In more than 85 per
cent of the cases involving children under five, and about 65 per cent of cases
involving children between five and nine, the bites had been on the head, face
or neck.
As victims became older
bites to that part of the body became less common, with more than 60 per cent
of the bites to those aged 20 to 24 being to an upper limb.-
In the 42 per cent of cases that the place where the biting took place was specified, 30 per cent had been at a home -- not necessarily the victim's own -- and 6 per cent on a street or highway.