Dog Bite-Related Fatalities
"Sonya" a therapy dog for Canines for Combat Wounded
Photo credit: John Gurzinski
Throughout the years, many people in Nevada have relied on dogs to assist in everyday life and to provide companionship. Today, while dogs continue to serve in many of their more traditional functions, dogs have also taken on new and unique tasks that enhance the lives of their owners and the community. Therapy, medical assistance, and search and rescue are only a few of the many services dogs provide to the people of Nevada.
There are an estimated 283,940 households in Nevada that own a dog(s) -- with a total population of 459,000 dogs.* The percentage of Nevada households with dogs, and the average number of dogs in each household is consistent with the national averages reported by the American Pet Products Association.
However, Nevada enjoys a lower rate of incidence of dog bites (111 bites per 100,000 persons) than the national average (129 bites per 100,000).
In 1998, Nevada began offering a dog bite safety course in every first grade classroom. Five years later, the Nevada Department of Agriculture produced a video entitled BowWowOw! , which was to be shown as part of the course.
Nevada realizes the value of dogs and understands that dog bites are a preventable injury, and that education can further reduce the already low incidence of dog bite injuries.
*Estimate from 2001 survey conducted by the American Veterinary Medical Association.
National Canine Research Council
What is a dog bite?
While the question seems simple enough, the answer is often not what we imagine.
Dog bite numbers offer little useful information about canine behavior: Dog bite numbers are simply a tally of the number of people who sought medical treatment and/or reported a break in skin after exposure to a dog's nail or tooth, –or in other words, the number of people that have been injured interacting with a dog; (which may or may not have involved aggression).
If dog bite numbers offer little useful information about canine aggression, then what can Nevada dog bite numbers really tell us about canine / human interaction?
Dog bite numbers reveal that there is no "dog bite epidemic" in Nevada. Between the years 1999 and 2003 there were an average of 2,370 dog bites per year in Nevada. This is an incidence rate of 111 dog bites per 100,000 persons, and is lower than the national average of 129 bites per 100,000 persons.
Only 3.4 % of all dog bite injuries in Nevada, between the years 1999 and 2003, were serious enough to warrant admission to a medical facility.
Interestingly, for 4 out of the 5 years, the average length of stay in a hospital / medical facility was longer for victims of cat bites than for victims of dog bites.
Increased awareness of the importance of humane care and control of dogs, the enactment and enforcement of leash laws, and dog bite prevention education, have all been successful in drastically lowering the number of reported dog-related injuries nationwide.
Nevada realizes that dog bites are a preventable injury and that dog bite education is an important tool in reducing the number of dog bites to children.

Nevada's BowWowOw program illustration
Source: All dog and cat bite data: "A Special Report on Dog and Cat Bite Injuries and Costs in
Nevada, 1999-2003." Bureau of Health Planning and Statistics and the Department of Agriculture, May 2005.
National Canine Research Council
| Nevada: Recognized Risks | Year 2007 |
| Tobacco-related fatalities: | 3,100 |
| Total (alcohol & non) traffic deaths: | 373 |
| Alcohol-related traffic fatalities: | 118 |
| Persons drowned in swimming pools: | 16 |
| Bicycle-related fatalities: | 16 |
| ATV-related fatalities: | 11 |
| Persons killed by dogs: | 1 |
