Livin' on the MDedge

Drive, chip, and putt your way to osteoarthritis relief


 

Dog walking is dangerous business

Yes, you did read that right. A lot of strange things can send you to the emergency department. Go ahead and add dog walking onto that list.

Investigators from Johns Hopkins University estimate that over 422,000 adults presented to U.S. emergency departments with leash-dependent dog walking-related injuries between 2001 and 2020.

Two leashed dogs face each other freestocks/Unsplash

With almost 53% of U.S. households owning at least one dog in 2021-2022 in the wake of the COVID pet boom, this kind of occurrence is becoming more common than you think. The annual number of dog-walking injuries more than quadrupled from 7,300 to 32,000 over the course of the study, and the researchers link that spike to the promotion of dog walking for fitness, along with the boost of ownership itself.

The most common injuries listed in the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System database were finger fracture, traumatic brain injury, and shoulder sprain or strain. These mostly involved falls from being pulled, tripped, or tangled up in the leash while walking. For those aged 65 years and older, traumatic brain injury and hip fracture were the most common.

Women were 50% more likely to sustain a fracture than were men, and dog owners aged 65 and older were three times as likely to fall, twice as likely to get a fracture, and 60% more likely to have brain injury than were younger people. Now, that’s not to say younger people don’t also get hurt. After all, dogs aren’t ageists. The researchers have that data but it’s coming out later.

Meanwhile, the pitfalls involved with just trying to get our daily steps in while letting Muffin do her business have us on the lookout for random squirrels.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Medicare ‘offers’ cancer patient a choice: Less life or more debt
MDedge Rheumatology
A purple warrior rises in the battle against diabetes
MDedge Rheumatology
Transplant surgeon to 30,000 marathoners: Give me that liver
MDedge Rheumatology
We have seen the future of healthy muffins, and its name is Roselle
MDedge Rheumatology
The human-looking robot therapist will coach your well-being now
MDedge Rheumatology
The air up there: Oxygen could be a bit overrated
MDedge Rheumatology
Sweaty treatment for social anxiety could pass the sniff test
MDedge Rheumatology
Lack of food for thought: Starve a bacterium, feed an infection
MDedge Rheumatology
Previously unknown viral families hide in the darnedest places
MDedge Rheumatology
Living the introvert’s dream: Alone for 500 days, but never lonely
MDedge Rheumatology