Not exact matches
If Christianity would stop making it so ridiculously easy to find such
fatal errors in their ways, legitimate news sources like CNN wouldn't have to
report and «
attack» them in the first place.
In discussing this
report, the CDC identified two problems with determining a rate of
fatal human
attacks by dog breed.
In discussing the CDC
report «Breeds of dogs involved in
fatal human
attacks in the United States between 1979 and 1998,» the latest
report issued by the CDC with a focus on bites by breed, the CDC said the following:
That was among a total of 47
fatal attacks (by all breeds)
reported during that period.
Delise, who reviewed news accounts of
fatal dog
attacks going back more than 100 years, also noted a shift in the way media
report these incidents.
The mewing of a Siamese cat at Chautauqua might have lured a 9 - foot nuisance alligator to shore Monday, but it was a hook baited with a chicken that helped trappers snag it.For the past two weeks, the critter had been climbing out of the canal that runs behind the new subdivision and sunning itself on the bank.Frightened residents had been calling Mount Dora police and animal control officers to
report that the gator was venturing farther onto land with each foray out of the canal.After Friday's
fatal attack on a 3 - year - old boy in Deltona's Lake Ashby, those fears were heightened.
Karen Delise studied every
fatal dog bite
reported in the years between 2002 - 2005, and found that «eleven dogs involved in
fatal attacks with no Pitbull characteristics were counted as Pitbulls, while their «true» breeds were not
reported, and three dogs that were clearly not Rottweilers were identified as Rottweilers.»
This kind of misidentification creates a feedback loop, as most studies of
fatal attacks rely on media
reports for breed identification.
As advocates, we are all too familiar with the dog bite fatality
report that was published in 2000 titled «Breeds of dogs involved in
fatal human
attacks in the United States between 1979 and 1998.»
For example, a study published in the September 15, 2000, issue of the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
reported that 17 % of dogs involved in
fatal attacks on humans between 1979 and 1998 were restrained on their owners» property at the time of the
attack.
They collect statistics on
fatal dog
attacks from news
reports.
Both the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association and Mortality and Morbidity
Report, along with many other reputable publications who only report the statistics, have shown that the pit bull, rottweiler, and some other breeds head the list of dogs involved in fatal attacks, maulings, and dog bites leading to human
Report, along with many other reputable publications who only
report the statistics, have shown that the pit bull, rottweiler, and some other breeds head the list of dogs involved in fatal attacks, maulings, and dog bites leading to human
report the statistics, have shown that the pit bull, rottweiler, and some other breeds head the list of dogs involved in
fatal attacks, maulings, and dog bites leading to human death.
Delise, K., 2007, National Canine Research Council Year - End
Report on
Fatal Dog
Attacks.
Despite his appalling injuries, Clive is now making a good recovery but Cats Protection says his case is not an isolated one, with around 10 cats every month
reported as being the victim of a dog
attack — 80 per cent of which are
fatal.
In
reporting their findings, the researchers made clear that the breeds of dogs said to be involved in human fatalities had varied over time, pointing out that the period 1975 - 1980 showed a different distribution of breeds than the later years.8 Subsequently, Karen Delise of the National Canine Research Council
reported that, in the decade 1966 - 1975, fewer than 2 % of all dogs involved in
fatal attacks in the United States were identified as of the breeds that figured prominently in the CDC study.
According to the JAVMA study, over 76 percent of dogs involved in
fatal attacks were resident dogs, despite media
reports that referred to them as pets.
As it turns out, there have been 54 cattle
attacks reported in the United Kingdom between 1993 and 2013; of those around 25 percent were
fatal.
Fatal dog
attacks occurred because of an unrestrained dog in 82 % of
reported cases.
In 2015 in the U.S., 34
fatal dog
attacks were
reported.
While there are almost always a handful of Maine dog bite
attacks reported annually, they are not often
fatal.