5 min read · Alabama Personal Injury · Birmingham & Hoover
After a dog bite in Alabama, prioritize medical care, dog bites carry infection and other risks, and seek treatment promptly. Identify the dog and its owner, and try to confirm the dog's vaccination status. Report the bite to local animal control or health authorities, document your injuries with photos, and gather witness information. Keep records of your treatment and expenses. These steps protect your health and preserve the evidence that may matter if you later pursue a claim under Alabama's dog bite rules.
A dog bite can be frightening and, especially for children, seriously injurious. What you do in the hours and days afterward affects both your recovery and your ability to hold the right party accountable.
This guide outlines practical steps to take after a dog bite in Alabama. It is educational and is not medical or legal advice for your specific situation.
Dog bites can cause infection, nerve and tissue damage, and scarring, and the risk is not always obvious from the surface. Seek medical attention promptly, and follow up as advised, including questions about rabies risk and the dog's vaccination history.
Prompt treatment protects your health and creates a medical record that documents the injury and links it to the bite, which can be important later.
Try to identify the dog and its owner, and obtain contact and, if possible, vaccination information. If the owner is unknown, note where the incident occurred and any details that could help identify the dog.
Report the bite to local animal control or health authorities. Reporting helps protect public safety, can prompt an assessment of the animal, and creates an official record of the incident.
Photograph your injuries promptly and over time as they heal, and keep torn or bloodied clothing if relevant. Gather the names and contact information of any witnesses, and write down what happened while it is fresh.
Keep all medical records and bills and track related expenses and missed work. Because Alabama's dog bite rules can turn on details like the dog's history and where the bite occurred, thorough documentation supports a potential claim.
After a dog bites her at a Birmingham park, Tara cleans up at home, decides not to see a doctor, and never finds out who owns the dog.
Without prompt medical care and identification of the dog and its owner, including vaccination status, both her health and any potential claim are at risk. Reporting the bite to animal control and photographing her injuries would have preserved the evidence Alabama's dog-bite rules often turn on.
This scenario is a simplified, illustrative hypothetical to explain how the law generally works. It is not a real case and is not a prediction or guarantee of any particular outcome.
Our Birmingham and Hoover personal injury attorneys handle these cases every day. Learn how we can help, or call for a free, confidential consultation. You pay no attorney fees unless we win.
This guide is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. It is not medical advice. Alabama law and its application depend on the specific facts of your situation and can change over time. For advice about your matter, speak with a licensed Alabama attorney.