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第 11 樓 / 游客
- 時間: 2007-1-27 10:40
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第 12 樓 / 游客
- 時間: 2007-1-27 13:36
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第 13 樓 / vanhao
- 時間: 2007-1-27 13:58
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第 14 樓 / 游客
- 時間: 2007-1-27 19:52
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第 15 樓 / 大江東去
- 時間: 2007-1-27 19:55
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第 16 樓 / 游客
- 時間: 2007-1-27 23:26
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第 17 樓 / pingguo
- 時間: 2007-1-28 00:58It is unfortunate that such incident happened to this friend. Based on past experiences, want to say something here for your reference. I am not a lawyer and the following does not represent any professional opinions.
1) call 911 to inform the police about the incident. Sometimes the police department will call upon the local SPCA.
2) report the incident to local SPCA immediately so that they will have a record on file about this aggressive dog and its owner. This is a very important step.
3) a dog bite can be treated at any local walk-in clinic without a fee if you are insured by BC MSP -- the BC medicare plan. A rabies shot or vaccination is good for 10 years and it is free to MSP participants.
4) keep the receipts for ambulance service (I believe it is not a free service) and other out of pocket expenses related to your bite treatment. The owner should reimburse you all these.
5) keep a diary for this incident, your treatment and your suffering. REMEMBER to put all your communications and correspondences with the dog owner in writing. No need to argue with them because it is a fact that you were bit by their dog.
6) If the case can be settled outside the court with the dog owner, do so.
To all friends:
*Never tease a dog or animal!
*Do NOT take it for granted that trained dogs do not bite. Keep it in mind they are animals and they can not speak human language. Be cautious!
I am a true dog lover. When a dog bite, it is not his/her fault, it is the owner's fault failing to realize that dogs are different from our human beings.
Good luck with this friend! -
第 18 樓 / 游客
- 時間: 2007-1-28 01:12
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第 19 樓 / vanhao
- 時間: 2007-1-28 12:11
pingguo 寫道:
It is unfortunate that such incident happened to this friend. Based on past experiences, want to say something here for your reference. I am not a lawyer and the following does not represent any professional opinions.
1) call 911 to inform the police about the incident. Sometimes the police department will call upon the local SPCA.
2) report the incident to local SPCA immediately so that they will have a record on file about this aggressive dog and its owner. This is a very important step.
3) a dog bite can be treated at any local walk-in clinic without a fee if you are insured by BC MSP -- the BC medicare plan. A rabies shot or vaccination is good for 10 years and it is free to MSP participants.
4) keep the receipts for ambulance service (I believe it is not a free service) and other out of pocket expenses related to your bite treatment. The owner should reimburse you all these.
5) keep a diary for this incident, your treatment and your suffering. REMEMBER to put all your communications and correspondences with the dog owner in writing. No need to argue with them because it is a fact that you were bit by their dog.
6) If the case can be settled outside the court with the dog owner, do so.
To all friends:
*Never tease a dog or animal!
*Do NOT take it for granted that trained dogs do not bite. Keep it in mind they are animals and they can not speak human language. Be cautious!
I am a true dog lover. When a dog bite, it is not his/her fault, it is the owner's fault failing to realize that dogs are different from our human beings.
Good luck with this friend!
thanks! It is professional opinions. -
第 20 樓 / myjames
- 時間: 2007-1-28 12:41
pingguo 寫道:
It is unfortunate that such incident happened to this friend. Based on past experiences, want to say something here for your reference. I am not a lawyer and the following does not represent any professional opinions.
1) call 911 to inform the police about the incident. Sometimes the police department will call upon the local SPCA.
2) report the incident to local SPCA immediately so that they will have a record on file about this aggressive dog and its owner. This is a very important step.
3) a dog bite can be treated at any local walk-in clinic without a fee if you are insured by BC MSP -- the BC medicare plan. A rabies shot or vaccination is good for 10 years and it is free to MSP participants.
4) keep the receipts for ambulance service (I believe it is not a free service) and other out of pocket expenses related to your bite treatment. The owner should reimburse you all these.
5) keep a diary for this incident, your treatment and your suffering. REMEMBER to put all your communications and correspondences with the dog owner in writing. No need to argue with them because it is a fact that you were bit by their dog.
6) If the case can be settled outside the court with the dog owner, do so.
To all friends:
*Never tease a dog or animal!
*Do NOT take it for granted that trained dogs do not bite. Keep it in mind they are animals and they can not speak human language. Be cautious!
I am a true dog lover. When a dog bite, it is not his/her fault, it is the owner's fault failing to realize that dogs are different from our human beings.
Good luck with this friend!
非常好 本文設精
SPCA: www.spca.bc.ca