New Delhi: K9 Healers, in collaboration with K9 School, has launched the National Dog Bite Prevention & Reduction Campaign, a science-led public safety initiative that aims to address India’s growing dog bite crisis while fully supporting animal welfare, rescue, feeding, and ABC/neutering programmes.
India records an estimated 17–18 million animal bite cases annually, with dogs responsible for the vast majority. The World Health Organization estimates that India accounts for approximately 36% of global human rabies deaths, nearly all of them dog-mediated. While free-ranging dogs account for a higher volume of reported bites, behavioural science, hospital surveillance, and field assessments indicate that pet dog bites form a more serious and preventable category. These incidents disproportionately occur inside homes, involve children and family members, result in severe injury and trauma, and are often preceded by prolonged warning signs that go unaddressed.
Field assessments conducted by K9 School and K9 Healers suggest that over 70% of serious pet dog bite cases showed clear warning signals that were noticed but rationalised, ignored, or suppressed months or years before the incident. Contributing factors include lack of structured training, delayed behavioural intervention, unverified handling environments, and absence of accountability after early warning signs. The issue is further compounded by unethical breeding practices in unregulated puppy mills and backyard operations, where inbreeding, early maternal separation, and lack of temperament screening can produce dogs with reduced stress tolerance, increasing bite risk in inexperienced homes.

Commenting on the campaign, Adnaan Khan, Founder, K9 School and K9 Healers, said, “India’s dog bite crisis is not a behavioural mystery or a breed issue; it is a systemic failure of early intervention, regulation, and public understanding. Decades of behavioural science and public health data show that most dog bites—particularly pet dog bites—are predictable and preventable when early warning signals, breeding practices, and handling environments are addressed in time. When these factors are ignored, risk accumulates silently. This campaign aims to move the discourse away from targeting community dogs and towards strengthening responsible pet ownership, ethical breeding, and better pet laws. We are equally focused on prevention in community settings, with proven, welfare-aligned models for community dog bite reduction already being successfully implemented across select RWAs. By shifting from fear-driven reactions to evidence-based prevention, we can protect both citizens and animals while fully supporting welfare efforts. Effective prevention requires mandatory pet owner education, early behavioural screening, breeder regulation, verified handling standards, and clear accountability pathways after warning incidents.”
The campaign also addresses community dog bites, which account for an estimated 70–80% of reported incidents. These cases are described as a manageable secondary challenge often linked to territorial disruption, reproductive stress, and environmental instability rather than inherent aggression. The initiative advocates for strengthened neutering and vaccination programmes, along with collaboration with stray feeders, rescue workers, and ABC/neutering staff to reduce hunger-driven conflict and enable behavioural rehabilitation.
At the core of the initiative is a prevention-first, welfare-aligned six-layer framework that includes regulation of unethical breeding, mandatory pre-acquisition owner education, early behavioural screening, behaviour-aware handling environments, strengthened neutering and vaccination programmes, and national public education on canine communication and warning signals.
The rollout will begin with public education and a narrative reset, followed by institutional engagement and policy dialogue. The long-term objective is to establish dog bite prevention as a recognised public safety category in India. K9 Healers will lead education, advocacy, and policy efforts, while K9 School will provide applied behavioural science expertise and prevention outcome frameworks.
















