The Easiest Way To Prevent A Dog Bite
<p>The best way to Prevent a Dog Bite
Whether a dog is defensive or assertive, he may be prone to bite if he feels threatened or attacked. Understanding each of the behaviour cues mentioned above will make it easier to manage a situation if a dog is snarling and showing signs that it may bite.
According to the Tolerant Society, the worst thing that you can do when faced with a defensive or aggressive dog is to turn your back and ran away.1
This again plays into the natural instinct of a dog to follow you, catch you, and bite you. Another fairly obvious tip to prevent a dog bite is to never bug a dog when it is eating, sleeping, gnawing on a toy, or caring for puppies.
If a dog has shown aggressive behavioral cues, you need to use these pointers to stop an attack:
Do not scream or run away.
Keep your hands at your sides, stay still, and avoid eye contact.
Allow the dog to lose interest.
Slowly back away from the dog.
If the dog lunges to bite, throw a jacket, bag, cycle, or another object in his course.
If you are knocked to the ground, curl into the fetal position, place your hands over your ears, and stay still. Try and react as little as possible.
If your dog is showing evidence of aggression, the best thing you can do to prevent him from biting or attacking is to socialize him. Find a trainer that works well with aggressive dogs in order to slowly condition your dog to accept new dogs and strangers.
In addition, if your dog hasn't been spayed or spayed, this will greatly reduce aggression and make it simpler to socialise your dog in new circumstances. A routine procedure like fixing will make your dog less certain to fight with other dogs and bite strangers.
Jean Cote is a Dog Training Expert and has rehabilitated many aggressive dogs and has worked with numerous issues including dog food aggression.
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