Views: 0 Author: Site Editor Publish Time: 2026-02-03 Origin: Site
New Year Anti-Poison Guide: Being a Dog Is Not Easy—Cherish Every Moment!
Suspicious Food? NO! If there’s a piece of meat on the ground that makes your dog as excited as winning the lottery, and an alarm goes off in your head: "Why is this meat more fragrant than the one I stewed?" — Don’t hesitate, pull your dog away!
Anti-Reconnaissance Walking Route Avoid "high-risk areas": beside trash cans, deep in the grass, and blind spots of surveillance cameras. After all, your dog’s curiosity may make it "learn a lesson from a mistake", but we can’t afford to take the risk!
Muzzle: Stylish and Life-Saving If your dog is a "floor sweeper" (always picking up things to eat from the ground), please put a muzzle on it, letting it experience the "food blogger mute mode".
Check the Mouth: If there are still poison residues visible, quickly pick them out.
Rinse: Rinse the mouth with clean water or normal saline to reduce absorption.
Can Induce Vomiting: If the dog is still conscious within 2 hours of ingestion? Use 3% hydrogen peroxide (1ml per kg of body weight) to make it "vomit out the food".
Do Not Induce Vomiting: If the dog is already convulsing, unconscious, or the poison is a corrosive substance (such as toilet cleaner), do not induce vomiting! Take it to the vet directly!
Take a sample of the poison (such as that "spiked" sausage) to help the vet make an accurate diagnosis and treatment.
Do not let the dog exercise vigorously on the way to avoid accelerating the spread of toxins.
Anti-Routine Walking Time Villains like to commit crimes early in the morning or late at night, so try to walk your dog when there are many people around. Let your dog be a "social butterfly" instead of a "lonely warrior".
Community Group Is an Intelligence Station Pay more attention to community dynamics. If you find suspicious people or food, take photos and call the police immediately to make the villains have nowhere to hide!
Prepare a First Aid Kit Hydrogen peroxide, activated carbon, vitamin K1—be prepared. Don’t regret it until your dog is poisoned.
Recently, pet poisoning cases have occurred frequently, but the law is still lagging behind. We can’t just rely on "civil investigation"; we must promote legislation to severely punish poisoners! Follow the progress of lawsuits such as @Mother of West Highland Papi to support the improvement of laws!