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Journal Article

Citation

Wilson F, Dwyer F, Bennett PC. J. Community Psychol. 2003; 31(1): 75-86.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Dog bites are an underestimated societal problem. Victims suffer injuries, both physical and emotional, that sometimes end in death, and the economic cost to the community is high. The most frequent victims are children, manly of whom are Mien at home. Current interventions, primarily aimed at the control of dogs in public areas, appear unlikely to reduce the incidence of dog bites within this group. In this study, parents beliefs about their children's behavior around familiar and strange dogs were investigated using a questionnaire. The impact of a brief educational dog safety program on 192 kindergarten children (M = 4.68 years of age) was then evaluated. The questionnaire data revealed that many children engage in unsafe behaviors around dogs, and that parents are largely unaware of the dangers associated with such behaviors. The dog safety program resulted in a significant increase in the ability of children to identify high risk situations for up to 4 weeks, with the benefits being even greater in those children whose Parents were also given information regarding safe behaviors aroundĀ dogs.

Language: en

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