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My Pet World: Animal behaviorists take a stand against breed-specific legislation

By Steve Dale, Tribune Content Agency on

DENVER, CO. -- At the Animal Behavior Symposium July 25, the American Veterinary Society of Animal Behavior (AVSAB) announced its rejection of breed-specific legislation (BSL) in a new position paper.

Some communities -- ironically including Denver -- ban specific dog breeds. Pit bull-type dogs always top of the list (and are sometimes the only dogs on the list).

The position paper begins: "AVSAB is concerned about the propensity of various communities' reliance on BSL as a tool to decrease the risk of dog bites to humans. AVSAB's position is that such legislation is ineffective."

When a serious dog bite occurs, or worse yet, someone is killed as a result of a dog bite, it's a tragedy. But is there really an epidemic of dog bites in America, as some stories in the popular press maintain?

According to the 2013-2014 American Pet Products Association National Pet Owners Survey, there are 83.3 million dogs in America, and according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), about 4.5 million dog bites per year.

Looking at those numbers more carefully, most dog bites occur within families (and mostly to children), and experts agree that with adult supervision and appropriate socialization of dogs to children, most bites could be prevented.

 

Just over two percent of all bites require a hospital stay, according to the AVSAB position statement. What's most relevant is that there's absolutely no evidence that banning breeds has any impact on dog bite numbers.

Between 1999 and 2006, an average of 27 people (in the U.S.) died annually as a result of a dog attack, according to a published report in the Journal of the American Medical Association - a number which, of course, should be lower.

Still, it turns out that people are far more dangerous to people than dogs are to people. Over 1,500 children died of child abuse and/or neglect within their own families in 2010 (according to the Administration for Children and Families), and there were over 16,000 homicides in the U.S. in 2010 (says the CDC). Sadly, in some major U.S. cities, more than 27 people may die of homicides in a month, according to the FBI.

A common refrain is, "Everyone knows that when dogs do attack, it's a pit bull responsible." Actually, the CDC stopped tracking breeds responsible for serious dog attacks many years ago for two reasons: The agency felt what's most important was what led individual dogs to attack in the first place. And in any case, breeds were likely being misidentified.

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