Why dogs are not your child’s best friend

A tragic death in Quebec is a cold reminder that dogs are animals, always capable of attack

by Anne Kingston on Friday, June 18, 2010 4:29pm - 50 Comments

Keri Leary/GETTY IMAGES

The tragic death of a 21-day-old girl in Saint-Barnabé-Sud, Que., last week puts a lens on a little-discussed issue in a culture that views dogs as family members and delights in YouTube videos of babies frolicking with protective St. Bernards: that these beloved animals are increasingly biting and attacking—most often the hand that feeds them.

Animal behaviourists shudder over the scant public details known of the Quebec case. The newborn had been strapped into a car seat placed on the floor and left unattended while two Siberian huskies, a male and a female, ran free. A third husky was found by police in a cage with her puppies. The baby’s 17-year-old mother, who was outside of the house when the attack occurred, was charged with manslaughter and will appear in juvenile court on Aug. 31.

As a minor, she cannot be identified. Police say the baby had been left unsupervised for at least 20 minutes; her lawyer, André Williams, says it was no more than five. Crown prosecutor Caroline Fontaine told reporters the charge stemmed from the mother’s alleged failure to provide “the necessities of life” to her child, a statement that gives rise to many questions, among them: does leaving a child alone with a dog constitute a failure to provide for a baby? Or is this situation a special case due to the mother’s age and socio-economic standing?

She and the baby’s 19-year-old father had lived in the house with two other families, one of which owns the dogs, for less than a week. No complaints had been registered against the animals, Williams told Maclean’s. The baby’s father told media they were gentle: “Strangers could approach them and they wouldn’t even bark.”

But dog behaviourists point out that bringing a newborn into a household alters the dynamic, particularly when the dogs are not trained. “The smell of a baby is different; its movements can make a dog uncomfortable,” says Kelowna, B.C.-based dog trainer Brad Pattison, the host of the TV show At the End of My Leash. Dogs taught boundaries can take on a nurturing disposition when a baby arrives, he says, though risk increases if there’s more than one dog. In 2008, a two-month-old baby in Tulsa, Okla., left in a windup swing was killed by one of the family’s two dogs—a black Lab puppy—while his 17-year-old mother, who wasn’t charged, slept in the next room.

Dogs often attack out of jealousy or to protect perceived territory, Pattison says. A woman he knows was bitten by her dog while breastfeeding: “The dog had been allowed on the bed for the duration of her life.”

The Quebec case has focused attention on Siberian huskies, known to kill newborns in similar circumstances. Pattison calls such canine profiling “breedist”: “Every breed is capable of attacking because they are an animal first and foremost,” he says. “We underestimate the power of a 16-lb. dog.”

The unnamed baby is one of three children killed in Canada this year by canines. In February, a 10-year-old boy was mauled by a pack of dogs in northern Saskatchewan; in March, a four-year-old boy was killed by sled dogs in the Baffin Island hamlet of Pangnirtung, Nunavut. Though dog owners are legally liable for their animals’ actions, no charges were laid in either case. Most attacks in Canada occur in rural areas or native reserves, says Colleen Lynn, founder of Dogsbite.org, a blog that tracks dog bites.

Children, unsurprisingly, are the most vulnerable. A June 2008 Canadian Veterinary Journal study found that of the 28 people who died of dog attacks between 1990 and 2008 in Canada, more than 85 per cent were under age 10. A survey of non-fatal dog bites to children by the Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program found 17,474 injuries between 1990 and 2003, most among children aged five to nine. Some 70 per cent of dog-bite victims know the dog; a quarter live in the same house, reports the Canadian Safety Council.

Such attacks are destined to increase, Pattison believes, given the “fur kid” phenomenon that sees owners treat dogs like children themselves. “People dress them up, they feed them human food in high chairs, they sleep with them, they’re pushing them in strollers,” he says. “It’s a recipe for disaster.”

The numbers are already rising. Hospitalizations for dog bites in Britain have increased by 40 per cent in the past four years—to almost 5,000 people a year. A Toronto Humane Society study found that dog bites in Ontario rose to 4,819 in 2009 from 4,381 in 2003, even after the 2003 pit bull ban.

“Bites are extremely common and not taken seriously enough,” says Enid Stiles, a Montreal veterinary behaviourist, who says many are oblivious to the risks: “I wouldn’t leave my child with someone I don’t know and I wouldn’t leave my dog with my child unattended,” she says.

It’s wise if unrealistic to say you should never leave a child alone with a dog, says Pattison. “But everybody I know who owns a dog and has children has run upstairs to change the laundry or take the garbage out.” That five minutes can bring heartbreak: last year, a two-week-old baby was mauled to death by a chow-mix in Arizona. No charges were laid against her mother, a policewoman who was in the bathroom.

A major attitudinal shift is needed, says Pattison: “People need to be aware dogs are not your best friend.” But that’s not the message of a heartwarming YouTube video showing a newborn sharing a blanket with a Siberian husky imitating the baby’s wails. As of this week, it had nearly half a million views.

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  • Amy

    You don't push dogs in strollers! You don't feed them food in a hair chair! I'm sorry, but we still are different species! Humans are almost incapable of living like dogs, yet we push the canine to their limits, to act like us. That's just wrong. You don't do that!

    I feel sorry about all the children who died because or dog attacks, but we must still recognize that animals don't have a bad mind, or heart. Nor do bears, or wolves, or coyotes. It's the conditions. It's how we have treated them. Humans, are vain creatures. Humans, we're just horrible, yet we look at the dog with loving eyes, and the next with disgust and hatred.
    However I look at this article, I can't help but think about what compelled the dogs to make decisions like that, yet in the end, I always point my finger at us.

    Maybe they aren't our best friends, but that doesn't stop us from trying. But we still have to recognize that, we're different, and that's just how it is. That's just how it always will be.

  • Jason

    I'd prefer to see an article about dogs that die to humans neglect.

    Sorry poochie but I cant afford to take you to the vets to get your eye looked at. I need a case of beer and momma needs some smokes for the weekend! Just throw some dirt on it, you'll be ok!

    • Vanechka

      Your attempt at being funny has failed miserably.

  • frank

    I have owned dogs for more than 40 years. Our first dog when I got married was a German shepard we had him 5 years before having our first child yet once he knew that she was part of the family absolutely no one could touch us unless we said so. Our next Dog was a rotti a female she was 2.5 years old when we got her. She protected the children and at one time a friend came over and just plafully tapped my son on the butt with a newspaper she got up from in front of the fireplace and lunges for my friend. She was however well trained and obedient and imediately stopped when told out. Out third and fourth dogs are also rottis. In all the years I prefer them over ohers they are loving loyal and raised right would never harm a soul unless your were in harms way..

  • Reeve

    Leaving a small child alone with a dog,any dog, is a dangerous and irresponsible act. There are cases on record of Pomeranian's killing infants that have been left alone with the dog for only minutes. There were 30 canine homicides in the U.S. in 2009 ( Canine Homicide refers to the killing of a human by a dog). Of these 30 dog related death's 24 were children……What's even more alarming are the recent U.S. canine homicide statistics. The first 6 months of 2010 produced 16 fatal dog attacks.The most frequent victims were young children who were killed by their parents own dogs….13 0f the 16 decedents were Children………Family dogs killed 14 of the 16 victims…….Never leave a child alone with any breed of dog.

  • Bridget

    The fact that dogs are animals is the very reason that it's the owners that are to blame, and leaving young children alone with any dog for any amount of time is a potentially deadly mistake, no matter how sweet-tempered and apparently harmless the dog usually is. A dog does not usually understand when things get out of hand or whether what they're doing is considered unacceptable, so humans need to be there to take responsibility intervene if they need to. When they don't, it's the innocent who pay the ultimate price.

  • Labrador owner

    Oh come on Anne Kingston. Please do your homework. Dogsbite.org and Colleen Lynn are nothing more than a hate machine which exist for one reason only – to stretch out and grab as many dog bites stories as they can and twist them into looking like Pit Bull maulings, while they completely disregard every other dog attack under the sun. They should NEVER be considered as a reliable place for gathering information about dog attacks ever.

  • realist

    wow here come the dog lovers

  • Education is the key

    Au contraire mon frere
    I`d say here come the baby lovers with Education to help people who are the real problem in these situations rather than the dogs http://www.dogsandstorks.com/

    Try and be part of the solution rather than part of the problem
    If you have nothing constructive to say,say nothing

  • dog diva

    While the issue of parental ignorance regarding dog behavior is very important, I'm not sure I would be listening to Brad Pattison for advice on the matter. There is a video circulating on the Internet, which his minions try hard to eliminate, that shows him slapping a dog's face as a form of discipline: http://www.facebook.com/#!/video/video.php?v=1015…. And, recent studies show that aggressive owners tend to have aggressive dogs: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/139465.p…. The real key to having a child-safe dog is to socialize it when it is between age 8-16 weeks (including introduction to children of all ages), train it early using positive training, and continue training and appropriate exercise and social activity throughout the dog's life. If you can't do that, don't get a dog, and for gosh sake, don't expose children to dogs that haven't had that background. Most dog bites happen out of fear! If you go to the shelter to get a family dog, don't take the one that hides in the back of the kennel or the one that charges the gates. Get a middle of the road *stable* dog, as identified by the behavior staff, even if it's old, black or the ugliest dog you ever saw!

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