You clearly don’t have kids and don’t live in the real world. |
|
I think you're getting biased responses posting in pets rather than off topic.
It's nice that they were nice, but how do you know this is the first time it's bitten anyone? Report so next time it's on record. |
| I have a friend who is an adult (obviously) but she still insists on petting other people’s dogs. She asks, of course, but it’s so cringy. |
Your civic duty is to stop demanding to pet dogs you don't know. |
OP, we are dog people, and I let my child pet strangers’ dogs (after asking, just like your child did). It’s a risk, but it it’s a risk we are willing to take for the love of dogs. What you did was perfectly normal and fine. I don’t want to live in a world where we can’t pet friendly dogs. Playing on playgrounds has a risk, letting dogs has a risk, sledding in the winter has a risk, but we let our kids do some of these things in the safest ways possible in the interest of a happy life. You didn’t do anything wrong. |
| I thought urgent care is a mandatory reporter? |
They may just report it automatically. Different, but our dog was bitten by another dog and the city called a day or two later—the vet reported it and never said anything to us. |
I don't know why people are on your ass OP, you seem reasonable to me. I have 2 dogs and people with kids ask to pet them all the time (they're certified therapy Goldens and amazing with kids). It's normal to ask the owner if it's OK and let a kid pet a dog. There's a certain contingent here that excuses poor behavior of dogs as normal for things like touching a dog's food, waking it up, hugging, etc. There's some truth to that and I am very conscientious with my own kids and others about respecting a dog's space, but still. They shouldn't bite in response. That said, and I know this may sound like I am contradicting myself, if the owners seemed shocked, apologetic, and generally responsible I probably wouldn't go out of my way to report it if the doctor didn't already. Hopefully this was a surprise to them too and they work to manage their dog better and turn down requests to pet in the future. |
If only! Sadly, that is untrue. Dog bites involve many different types of bacteria. Augmentin is the antibiotic of choice because it has broad coverage of the most common types involved, including aerobes and anaerobes. But some of the bacteria could be penicillin resistant or a different antibiotic could have been prescribed due to allergy. Follow the instructions from the ER. |
I get more adults ask to pet my dog than kids. They love him and I think both get something out of the brief interaction. Kids ask to hold him and I usually say no unless I know the kid |
In 99.9% of dog bite cases, the medications provided prevent infection. Don't be such a Cassandra. |
|
I would not. They weren’t dicks about. They apologized and offered to cover medical bill.
The dogs were leashes, now they know I’m sure they’ll be more careful. |
I’m an adult who does this. Why does it make you cringe? I love dogs, especially when I’m out of town and missing my own. |
I’m an MD, so it’s my job to be a Cassandra. Last week I saw a guy who was admitted for IV antibiotics for a dog bite after failing doxycycline. Again, follow the instructions from the ER. |
I do not for one fraction of a second believe you're a doctor. You're an armchair diagnosis bore. This site is anonymous, everything is opinion and conjecture only. |