Key Takeaways: The First 24 Hours After a Child Dog Bite
- Secure & Assess: Move your child to safety immediately and check for severe bleeding or multiple wounds before doing anything else.
- Seek Medical Care: Always visit an ER or urgent care to clean the wound, prevent infection, and create an official medical record.
- Identify & Report: Obtain the dog owner’s information and report the incident to New Jersey Animal Control to trigger an investigation and quarantine.
- Document Everything: Take high-resolution photos of your child’s injuries, torn clothing, and the scene of the attack before healing begins.
- Protect Your Claim: Do not sign any paperwork or give recorded statements to the dog owner’s insurance adjusters without legal guidance.
- Monitor Emotional Health: Watch for signs of trauma like night terrors or withdrawal, as psychological impacts are compensable under NJ law.
1. Secure Your Child and Assess the Immediate Threat
Your primary instinct is to comfort your child, but your first action must be to ensure the attack is over. If the dog is still loose, aggressive, or nearby, you must prioritize moving your child to a safe, enclosed environment, whether that is your car, your home, or behind a fence. Once you are in a safe location, perform a rapid assessment of the injuries. Adrenaline often masks pain, and a child may be crying from fear rather than the specific site of the wound.- Check for severe bleeding: Apply direct pressure with a clean cloth.
- Look for multiple wounds: Dogs often bite and release quickly, sometimes striking multiple areas. Check arms, legs, face, and neck thoroughly.
- Keep the child calm: Panicked movement can increase blood flow or exacerbate tissue damage.
2. Seek Professional Medical Attention Immediately
Even if a bite looks like a “minor” puncture or scrape, you must seek professional medical care within the first few hours. Home remedies are insufficient for animal bites due to the high risk of bacterial infection. Dog mouths carry bacteria that can cause serious complications, such as Pasteurella or staph infections, if not properly irrigated and treated with antibiotics. For New Jersey parents, taking your child to a doctor or the emergency room serves two vital functions:- Health Safety: Medical professionals will clean the wound deeper than you can at home. They will also review your child’s vaccination history to determine if a tetanus booster is required and assess the risk of rabies, which is fatal if untreated.
- Evidence Building: The medical report generated during this first visit is the foundation of any future legal claim. It links the injury directly to the time and date of the dog attack. Insurance companies often try to argue that injuries were pre-existing or caused by something else if there is a delay in seeking treatment.
3. Identify the Dog and the Owner
While you are managing your child’s care, you (or a trusted family member or witness) need to identify the dog. If the owner is present, get their name, address, and phone number. Ask for their homeowner’s insurance information right then and there. Do not wait for them to send it later. If the dog is a stray or the owner has fled the scene, try to get a photo of the dog or write down a detailed description (breed, color, size, and collar details). This is crucial for Animal Control to locate the animal later. If the dog cannot be located and its vaccination status confirmed, your child may be forced to undergo a painful series of rabies prophylaxis shots as a precaution.4. Report the Incident to New Jersey Authorities
In the chaos of the first day, many parents forget to file an official dog bite report. You must contact the local police department or the municipal Animal Control officer in the town where the bite occurred. Why report it? In New Jersey, a reported dog bite triggers an investigation. The authorities will order a quarantine of the dog (usually 10 days) to watch for signs of rabies. The police report or Animal Control report is an unbiased, official government document that states a bite occurred. This prevents the dog owner from later claiming the incident never happened or that your child was injured playing elsewhere.5. Document the Injuries and the Scene
Before bandages cover the wounds, and before the healing process begins, take high-resolution photographs of your child’s injuries.- Show All Angles: Take close-ups of the puncture wounds and lacerations, as well as wide shots showing the location of the injury on the child’s body.
- Keep Clothing: Do not throw away bloody or torn clothing. Photograph the shirt or pants your child was wearing, as this demonstrates the violence of the attack.
- Photograph the Scene: If possible, go back to the location of the attack and take photos of the area. Was the gate open? Was the dog unchained? Visual evidence of the environment helps establish context.
6. Explore New Jersey’s Strict Liability Law
Many parents worry that they cannot sue if they don’t know the dog’s history. A question victims and their families often ask is, “What if the dog has never bitten anyone before?” New Jersey is a strict liability state under the Dog Bite Statute N.J.S.A. § 4:19-16. This means the dog owner is liable for all damages caused by the bite, regardless of the dog’s past behavior. Unlike some states that protect owners the first time their dog bites, New Jersey holds the owner responsible immediately. As long as your child was not trespassing (or was in a public place), the owner is liable. Even in cases of trespassing, special considerations often apply to young children who may not understand property boundaries.7. Do Not Sign Paperwork from Insurance Adjusters
Within the first 24 to 48 hours, the dog owner’s homeowner’s insurance company may contact you. They may sound sympathetic and offer to pay the medical bills quickly. Do not sign a release or give a recorded statement. Insurance adjusters are trained to minimize payouts. They know that facial scarring on a child, future plastic surgery needs, and psychological trauma (PTSD) are expensive claims. They may try to get you to settle for the cost of the emergency room visit before the full extent of the physical and emotional damage is known.Monitor Your Child’s Emotional State
The physical wounds are visible immediately, but the psychological wounds take time to surface. In the first 24 hours, watch for signs of acute stress:- Night terrors or inability to sleep.
- Refusal to go outside or near pets they previously loved.
- Uncontrollable crying or withdrawal.
- Bedwetting in toilet-trained children.
9. Contact a New Jersey Dog Bite Lawyer
Because children are still growing, the full impact of a dog bite, such as how a scar will stretch as they grow or if nerve damage will affect their development, cannot be fully known in 24 hours. However, securing legal representation immediately ensures that evidence is preserved and your rights are protected against aggressive insurance tactics.Your Child Deserves the Best Lawyer for Child Cases in New Jersey
| Why David Cowhey is the Best Child Dog Bite Lawyer in New Jersey | |
|---|---|
| Unmatched Qualifications | What This Means for Your Family |
| Most Six-Figure Settlements in NJ | He holds the record for the most six-figure dog bite settlements of any lawyer in New Jersey. Insurance companies know his track record, which prevents them from lowballing your child’s claim. |
| $1 Million Child Settlement Record | He is one of the only lawyers in the state to successfully secure a $1 million settlement specifically for a child dog bite victim. He knows how to calculate and demand coverage for lifelong damages, including future reconstructive surgeries and psychological care. |
| 24/7 Emergency Responses | Child dog attacks are emergencies that don’t wait for business hours. He provides 24/7 direct responses to child dog attacks, allowing parents to get immediate legal guidance and evidence preservation straight from the hospital. |