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Toddler Hospitalised with Bone-Deep Dog Bite in Buriram


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Posted

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Picture courtesy of Daily News

 

A two-year-old boy was seriously injured after being attacked by a family dog at a relative’s home in Buriram Province. The child, who had been playing at his grandmother's relative's house, suffered a deep wound to his leg, stretching 7 centimetres wide and involving tendons and bone.

 

On 24th March, it was reported that the incident occurred when the boy, familiar with the dog named ‘Oleang’, was unexpectedly bitten.

 

The dog, previously known for its friendly demeanour, abruptly turned violent, leaving the boy’s grandmother, Mrs. Sin, in shock. She expressed disbelief that such an incident could occur, given the dog’s usual familiarity with her grandson.

 

 

 

Mrs. Sin described how ‘Oleang’ approached the boy and bit his leg, causing panic among those present. It took several minutes for her and family members to free the child from the dog’s grip.

 

The severe wound required medical intervention at a local hospital, where the child is being closely monitored for infection due to the depth of the injury.

 

Speculation has arisen regarding the sudden change in the dog's behaviour. The dog's owner noted that ‘Oleang’ had appeared irritable in the days leading up to the attack, raising concerns about a possible rabies infection. As a precaution, the dog has been quarantined for observation, reported Daily News.

 

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-- 2025-03-25

 

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Posted

In defence of dogs......

 

I have seen the way that some kids 'play' with, and around dogs.

My wife was a teacher and she took our well-trained German shepherd to school one day for a class.

After she caught one kid trying to stick a pencil up his bum, and another kid trying to ride him, she realised the stupidity of that project.

 

I am not suggesting that this is what the kid in the article was doing, but some dogs are nervous around kids for a good reason.

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Posted
1 hour ago, Tropicalevo said:

I am not suggesting that this is what the kid in the article was doing

How kind of you!

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Posted
7 hours ago, webfact said:

image.jpeg

Picture courtesy of Daily News

 

A two-year-old boy was seriously injured after being attacked by a family dog at a relative’s home in Buriram Province. The child, who had been playing at his grandmother's relative's house, suffered a deep wound to his leg, stretching 7 centimetres wide and involving tendons and bone.

 

On 24th March, it was reported that the incident occurred when the boy, familiar with the dog named ‘Oleang’, was unexpectedly bitten.

 

The dog, previously known for its friendly demeanour, abruptly turned violent, leaving the boy’s grandmother, Mrs. Sin, in shock. She expressed disbelief that such an incident could occur, given the dog’s usual familiarity with her grandson.

 

 

 

Mrs. Sin described how ‘Oleang’ approached the boy and bit his leg, causing panic among those present. It took several minutes for her and family members to free the child from the dog’s grip.

 

The severe wound required medical intervention at a local hospital, where the child is being closely monitored for infection due to the depth of the injury.

 

Speculation has arisen regarding the sudden change in the dog's behaviour. The dog's owner noted that ‘Oleang’ had appeared irritable in the days leading up to the attack, raising concerns about a possible rabies infection. As a precaution, the dog has been quarantined for observation, reported Daily News.

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

-- 2025-03-25

 

image.png

 

image.jpeg

The little one is traumatized for his whole life.🥺

And the dog? I hope he's not alive anymore.

However, we're in buddhist Thailand.

So they will keep him😨probably.

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Posted

Assuming the child did nothing to provoke the dog, I agree with quarantining the dog for observation. 

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Posted
1 hour ago, WDSmart said:

Assuming the child did nothing to provoke the dog, I agree with quarantining the dog for observation. 

and an injection 

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Posted

My neighbors kid was severely bitten in the face by his own dog a few years ago.

The dog was always extremely aggressive towards strangers but the dog slept in the bed with the kid.

The dog was always viciously barking at us when we had to pass him but there was a fence so he could not get near us.

A few days before the attack i walked to the road and the dog went berserk like usual but this time while he was barking he severely was shaken his head.

Giving my background in working with dogs i knew right away  the dog had a severe ear infection,it made him even angrier.

The attack on the kid happened  two days later.

Kid in emergency and we never saw the dog again.

When a dog has been irritable for a few days there usually is a cause.

 

Posted
4 hours ago, newbee2022 said:

The little one is traumatized for his whole life.🥺

And the dog? I hope he's not alive anymore.

However, we're in buddhist Thailand.

So they will keep him😨probably.

no...nothing to do with your smokescreen Buddhism .....   they'll keep the dog 

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Posted
7 minutes ago, steven100 said:
2 hours ago, WDSmart said:

Assuming the child did nothing to provoke the dog, I agree with quarantining the dog for observation. 

and an injection 

I agree both the child and the dog might need an injection if it is determined that the dog has rabies. 

Posted
2 hours ago, WDSmart said:

I agree both the child and the dog might need an injection if it is determined that the dog has rabies. 

yes,   treat the poor little boy for everything, 

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Posted
51 minutes ago, steven100 said:

no...nothing to do with your smokescreen Buddhism .....   they'll keep the dog because they are uneducated & brain dead. 

I see, you're not living in Thailand😳

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Posted
42 minutes ago, steven100 said:

yes,   treat the poor little boy for everything,   inject the dog with pentobarbital.   

I don't think the child should be punished for the incident by treating him for "everything." Nothing in the article indicated the child had done anything to provoke the dog, although, of course, that might be the case. I think there is still time for the child to learn how to treat and live compatibly with animals and other people. As far as the dog is concerned, a small amount of pentobarbital could be given as a sedative, but too much would be dangerous, so I think that is uncalled for.  

Posted
1 minute ago, WDSmart said:

I don't think the child should be punished for the incident by treating him for "everything." Nothing in the article indicated the child had done anything to provoke the dog, although, of course, that might be the case. I think there is still time for the child to learn how to treat and live compatibly with animals and other people. As far as the dog is concerned, a small amount of pentobarbital could be given as a sedative, but too much would be dangerous, so I think that is uncalled for.  

are you crazy?    take care of the poor little boy.   and give the dog a GOOD LARGE dose injection of pentobarbital.  

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Posted
10 hours ago, steven100 said:

shoot the dog ....    problem solved.

 

what if others weren't around to stop the mongrel ....  

 

oh'   let me guess ... he's a pitbull x .... and he wouldn't hurt a fly  :violin:

 

My very first thoughts...  Pit Bull...  but thats clearly due to the bias and media conditioning we've received over the years.

 

I agree - shoot the dog - it has to be put down. 

 

And...  yep - I'm still betting this dog was a bit-bull variety or one of the breeds that is commonly banned or on 'dangerous dogs lists' in many countries....   It certainly wasn't a poodle !!!

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Posted
55 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

I see, you're not living in Thailand😳

I DO live in Thailand and if it were my dog, I would have it put down or put if down myself.

 

BTW where a person lives has nothing to do with the thread.

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Posted
9 minutes ago, billd766 said:

I DO live in Thailand and if it were my dog, I would have it put down or put if down myself.

 

BTW where a person lives has nothing to do with the thread.

You would probably have to do it yourself as most Thai vets will not put an animal down in my experience.

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Posted
11 hours ago, steven100 said:

let me guess ... he's a pitbull x

 

51 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

My very first thoughts...  Pit Bull

 

3 hours ago, Bohemianfish said:

Pitbull? Vicious breed?

Please can we not make stories and just stick to the facts. What’s wrong with you people.

Not a Pit Bull or a viscous breed. 
Just a Thai dog.

 

https://www.banmuang.co.th/news/region/422808

 

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Posted
11 minutes ago, rough diamond said:

You would probably have to do it yourself as most Thai vets will not put an animal down in my experience.

you don't need a vet 

Posted
1 hour ago, MalcolmB said:
12 hours ago, steven100 said:

let me guess ... he's a pitbull x

 

1 hour ago, richard_smith237 said:

My very first thoughts...  Pit Bull

 

4 hours ago, Bohemianfish said:

Pitbull? Vicious breed?

Please can we not make stories and just stick to the facts. What’s wrong with you people.

Not a Pit Bull or a viscous breed. 
Just a Thai dog.

 

https://www.banmuang.co.th/news/region/422808

 

Are you genuinely that dense, or is punctuation just too advanced for you? It’s called a question mark - look it up. It means someone is asking something, not telling a bedtime story, so spare us you virtue signalling...  its pathetic from someone as hypocritical as yourself.... 

 

 

Your link finally coughs up that it’s a Thai breed dog...  congratulations...

 

Now tell me, why the hell wasn’t that mentioned in the original piece? Instead, we get this half-baked mess that leaves a vacuum for guesswork.

 

That’s the thing you're clearly unfamiliar with - questions. You know, those squiggly things at the end of sentences? They exist because the story is incomplete (as often mentioned in these threads).

 

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, billd766 said:

I DO live in Thailand and if it were my dog, I would have it put down or put if down myself.

 

BTW where a person lives has nothing to do with the thread.

BTW where a person lives has nothing to do with the thread.

 

But it has to do with a kind of thinking. And you are definitely not familiar with Thai culture.

Good day

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Posted
4 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

we get this half-baked mess that leaves a vacuum for guesswork.

Which is why I always read the news before commenting and making ridiculous speculations.

 

Perhaps you should try it instead of endlessly making things up. 

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Posted
16 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

That’s the thing you're clearly unfamiliar with - questions

I am only interested in answers and facts. 

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Posted
2 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

I'm still betting this dog was a bit-bull variety or one of the breeds that is commonly banned or on 'dangerous dogs lists' in many countries....   It certainly wasn't a poodle !!!

 

17 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

questions. You know, those squiggly things at the end of sentences?

No squiggly thing at the end of your sentence.

 

Now how much were you thing of betting?

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