Bleeding from being pecked by a parrot, if the wound is shallow and just broken skin, it is usually not important and needs to be cleaned and sterilized in time. If the wound is deeper and the blood flow is not stopping, it is usually important and needs to be cleaned, sutured and vaccinated against tetanus. According to the Technical Guidelines for Rabies Prevention and Control (2016 Edition), it is indicated that animals other than mammals do not carry the rabies virus, and parrots do not belong to mammals, so they are generally not dangerous. Bleeding wounds pecked by parrots can be rinsed with water and disinfected with iodophor or medical alcohol cotton balls if they are very small and shallow. If the parrot pecked bleeding wound is deeper and the blood flow is not stopping, you need to go to the hospital for disinfection, debridement, suture to stop bleeding, tetanus vaccination and other treatments. If the parrot pecked bleeding wound is deeper, you need to consult a doctor in a timely manner, you need to be under the guidance of the doctor to carry out targeted treatment, through the “early detection, early diagnosis, early treatment” to reduce the adverse effects of the disease.