Home / Royal Mail / Warning as Warrington postwoman left with blood seeping through trousers after dog attack

Warning as Warrington postwoman left with blood seeping through trousers after dog attack

A WARRINGTON woman was among almost 2,500 postal workers to be attacked by a dog in the UK in the past year.

And they ‘could easily have ended in fatalities’, a union official has warned.

Some incidents ended in serious and permanent injury, with one Tina O’Toole, a postwoman in Warrington for three years, describing blood seeping through her trousers after she was bitten on the leg while doing her rounds.

The warning comes as the Royal Mail urges dog owners to control their pets as new figures show an increase in attacks on staff.

Some 2,484 separate incidents were reported in 2018-19 – a nine per cent year-on-year rise – equating to nearly 50 attacks per week.

Tina O’Toole needed hospital treatment, a skin flap graft, and physiotherapy after she was bitten while delivering post at Phoenix Road in Dallam last month.

The property is now banned from receiving mail.

She said: “Once I had delivered the mail I turned to leave the premises when I heard the dog barking and running up behind me. As I was attempting to get through the gate I felt pain to my right calf.

“I managed to get through the gate and close it behind me. I then went into shock and looked down at my leg to see the blood seeping through my trousers. Neighbours called the ambulance and I was rushed to hospital.

“I’d just ask customers, please don’t have your dog loose in the garden when we are on our rounds.”

The Royal Mail warned ‘even the most placid animal can be prone to attack if it feels it, or its territory, is being threatened’.

Communication Workers Union health and safety officer Dave Joyce said: “Dog-owning customers are failing in their responsibility to postal workers by simply securing their dogs before opening the door.

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“Worryingly there were a number of very serious dog attacks on postal workers in both Royal Mail delivery and Parcelforce delivery over this past year, some of which could easily have ended in fatalities if it wasn’t for the intervention of the owners and good Samaritans

“Taking simple precautions can prevent the pain for everyone concerned.

“Put the dog away in a secure room before opening the door to collect and sign for deliveries.”

Royal Mail’s Dog Awareness Week runs from Monday until Saturday, with a special postmark applied to all stamped items during the week.




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