Raghavan Malathi
Office of the Dean, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Can Vet J. 2008 Jun;49(6):577-81.
In Canada, public debates on dog attacks are dominated by studies from the United States. An electronic search of media reports in the Canadian Newsstand database, for the years 1990 to 2007, identified 28 fatalities from dog-bite injuries. Predominant factors in this case series were owned, known dogs; residential location; children's unsupervised access to area with dogs; and rural/remote areas, including aboriginal reserves in the prairies. A higher proportion of sled dogs and, possibly, mixed-breed dogs in Canada than in the United States caused fatalities, as did multiple dogs rather than single dogs. Free-roaming dog packs, reported only from rural communities, caused most on-reserve fatalities. Future studies are needed to assess if this rural/urban divide is observed in nonfatal attacks and if the breeds that bite in Canada are different from the breeds that killed. Breed representation in this paper and, perhaps, multiple-dog overrepresentation should be understood in the context of the overall Canadian dog population.
在加拿大,关于犬类攻击的公开辩论主要受来自美国的研究影响。对1990年至2007年加拿大报摊数据库中的媒体报道进行电子搜索,发现有28人因犬类咬伤致死。该病例系列中的主要因素包括家养的、熟悉的狗;居住地点;儿童在无人监管的情况下进入有狗的区域;以及农村/偏远地区,包括草原地区的原住民保留地。与美国相比,加拿大因雪橇犬以及可能还有混种犬导致死亡的比例更高,多只狗造成的死亡情况也比单只狗更多。仅在农村社区有报道的自由放养犬群导致了大多数保留地内的死亡事件。未来需要开展研究,以评估在非致命攻击中是否也存在这种城乡差异,以及在加拿大咬人犬的品种是否与致死犬的品种不同。本文中犬种的占比情况,或许还有多只狗占比过高的情况,应结合加拿大犬类总数的背景来理解。