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Tips for Parents and Dog Guardians to Help Keep Kids Safe
The 3 Most Important Things to Teach Your Kids
- Dogs Don’t Like Hugs and Kisses – Teach your kids not to hug or kiss a dog on the face. Hugging the family dog or face-to-face contact are common causes of facial bites. Instead, teach kids to scratch the dog on the chest or the side of the neck.
- Be a Tree If a Strange Dog Approaches – Teach kids to stand still, like a tree. Trees are boring and the dog will eventually go away. This works for strange dogs and anytime the family dog gets too frisky or becomes aggressive.
- Never Tease a Dog – and never disturb a dog sleeping, eating or protecting something.
The 2 Most Important Things Parents Can Do
- Supervise – Don’t assume your dog is good with kids. If a toddler must interact with your dog, you should have your hands on the dog too. Even if your dog is great with kids and has never bitten – why take a chance?
- Train the dog – Take your dog to training classes where positive reinforcement is used. Never pin, shake, choke, or hold the dog down or roll it over to teach it a lesson. Dogs treated this way will likely turn their aggression on weaker family members. Involve older children in training the family dog while supervising. Don’t allow children to punish the dog. Condition the dog to enjoy the presence and actions of children using positive experiences.
The 3 Most Important Things Dog Owners Can Do
- Help Your Dog Feel Safe – Understand what your dog is communicating and help them feel safe, secure and relaxed. Happy stress free dogs are safer for all family members.
- Condition Your Dog for the World – Give your puppy many new positive experiences. Train your pet using positive methods that empower your pet to not only learn but feel safe.
- Supervise Your Dog – Supervise your dog at all times around children. Do not allow children to hug and kiss any dog. If visiting children are bothering your dog, put the dog away or send the children home.
About the Contributor
Doggone Safe! Mission Statement
To promote education initiatives for the purpose of dog bite prevention and increased child safety around dogs. To provide tools and resources to professional dog trainers, behavior consultants and pet care professionals to support dog bite prevention education.