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result(s) for
"Service dogs"
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Therapy dogs
by
Laughlin, Kara L., author
,
Laughlin, Kara L. Dogs with jobs
in
Dogs Therapeutic use Juvenile literature.
,
Psychiatric service dogs Juvenile literature.
,
Dogs Therapeutic use.
2019
\"Describes the necessity of various therapy dogs, their duties, temperament, training, and common breeds chosen.\"--Provided by publisher.
Visual Exploration and Observation of Real-Life Interactions Between Children with ASD and Service Dogs
by
Champagne, Noël
,
Plusquellec, Pierrich
,
Grandgeorge, Marine
in
Animals
,
Applied behavior analysis
,
Assistance animals
2021
Two original studies explored relationships between visual attention of children with ASD (candidates for receiving a service dog) and their behaviors during their first interaction with a service dog. The first study consisted in video behavioural analyses of 16 children with ASD interacting with a service dog. During the interaction with a service dog, the time children with ASD spent looking towards social items vs objects was associated with how they interacted with the service dog. The second study was exploratory (i.e. 6 children), using the same behavioural approach but coupled with eye-tracking data. The more children with ASD looked at both their parent and the evaluator, as opposed to inanimate items, the more they interacted with the service dog.
Journal Article
Paws of courage : true tales of heroic dogs that protect and serve
by
Furstinger, Nancy, author
in
Service dogs Juvenile literature.
,
Working dogs Juvenile literature.
,
Animal heroes Juvenile literature.
2016
Modern wars recruit more than just human soldiers. Our canine companions also serve in the line of duty and under fire, whether helping police protect our home turf or accompanying soldiers on missions abroad. This collection features dogs profiled for their bravery, friendship, heroism, and devotion.
Geographic Availability of Assistance Dogs: Dogs Placed in 2013–2014 by ADI- or IGDF-Accredited or Candidate Facilities in the United States and Canada, and Non-accredited U.S. Facilities
by
Hart, Lynette A
,
Walther, Sandra
,
Willits, Neil H
in
Accreditation
,
Americans with Disabilities Act 1990-US
,
Animal training
2019
Assistance dogs' roles have diversified to support people with various disabilities, especially in the U.S. Data presented here are from the U.S. and Canada non-profit facilities (including both accredited and candidate members that fulfilled partial requirements: all here termed “accredited”) of Assistance Dogs International (ADI) and the International Guide Dog Federation (IGDF), and from non-accredited U.S. assistance dog training facilities, on the numbers and types of dogs they placed in 2013 and 2014 with persons who have disabilities. ADI categories of assistance dogs are for guide, hearing, and service (including for assistance with mobility, autism, psychiatric, diabetes, seizure disabilities). Accredited facilities in 28 states and 3 provinces responded; accredited non-responding facilities were in 22 states and 1 province (some in states/provinces with responding accredited facilities). Non-accredited facilities in 16 states responded. U.S./Canada responding accredited facilities (55 of 96: 57%) placed 2,374 dogs; non-accredited U.S. facilities (22 of 133: 16.5%) placed 797 dogs. Accredited facilities placed similar numbers of dogs for guiding ( n = 918) or mobility ( n = 943), but many more facilities placed mobility service dogs than guide dogs. Autism service dogs were third most for accredited ( n = 205 placements) and U.S. non-accredited ( n = 72) facilities. Psychiatric service dogs were fourth most common in accredited placements ( n = 119) and accounted for most placements ( n = 526) in non-accredited facilities. Other accredited placements were for: hearing ( n = 109); diabetic alert ( n = 69), and seizure response ( n = 11). Responding non-accredited facilities placed 17 hearing dogs, 30 diabetic alert dogs, and 18 seizure response dogs. Non-accredited facilities placed many dogs for psychiatric assistance, often for veterans, but ADI accreditation is required for veterans to have financial reimbursement. Twenty states and several provinces had no responding facilities; 17 of these states had no accredited facilities. In regions lacking facilities, some people with disabilities may find it inconvenient living far from any supportive facility, even if travel costs are provided. Despite accelerated U.S./Canada placements, access to well-trained assistance dogs continues to be limited and inconvenient for many people with disabilities, and the numerous sources of expensive, poorly trained dogs add confusion for potential handlers.
Journal Article
The study of service dogs for veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: a scoping literature review
by
Wijnker, Joris J.
,
Rodenburg, Bas
,
van Houtert, Emmy A. E.
in
Assistance animals
,
canine
,
Canino
2018
The therapeutic application of human-animal interaction has gained interest recently. One form this interest takes is the use of service dogs as complementary treatment for veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Many reports on the positive effect of PTSD Service Dogs (PSDs) on veterans exist, though most are indirect, anecdotal, or based on self-perceived welfare by veterans. They therefore only give a partial insight into PSD effect. To gain a more complete understanding of whether PSDs can be considered an effective complementary treatment for PTSD, a scoping literature review was performed on available studies of PSDs. The key search words were 'dog', 'canine', 'veteran', and 'PTSD'. This yielded 126 articles, of which 19 matched the inclusion criteria (six empirical studies). Recurrent themes in included articles were identified for discussion of methodology and/or results. It was found that results from most included studies were either applicable to human-animal interaction in general or other types of service animals. They therefore did not represent PSDs specifically. Studies which did discuss PSDs specifically only studied welfare experience in veterans, but used different methodologies. This lead us to conclude there is currently no undisputed empirical evidence that PSDs are an effective complementary treatment for veterans with PTSD other than reports on positive welfare experience. Additionally, the lack of development standardization and knowledge regarding welfare of PSDs creates risks for both human and animal welfare. It is therefore recommended that a study on the effect of PSDs be expanded to include evaluation methods besides self-perceived welfare of assisted humans. Future studies could include evaluations regarding human stress response and functioning, ideally conducted according to validated scientific methodologies using objective measurement techniques to identify the added value and mechanisms of using PSDs to assist treatment of PTSD in humans.
Journal Article
Sadie : the dog who finds the evidence
by
Feldman, Thea, author
,
Danger, Chris, illustrator
,
American Humane Association
in
Service dogs Juvenile literature.
,
Service dogs.
,
JUVENILE NONFICTION / Readers / Beginner.
2014
\"Meet Sadie, a real dog who works with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, in this inspiring, Level 2 Ready-to-Read based on one of the winners of the annual American Humane Association's Hero Dog Awards[trademark symbol]! Meet Sadie. Sadie has an important job as an Arson Dog with the Colorado Bureau of Investigation. Because her sense of smell is 100 times stronger than a human's, she helps firefighters and police officers find the causes of fires. That makes her a hero to many people. When she's not busy sniffing out the bad guys, Sadie visits schools to teach kids about fire safety! Read her action-packed story to find out more about what this amazing canine does and what makes Sadie a hero! Emerging readers will love discovering the inspiring, action-packed story of a different heroic dog in each book of the Hero Dog series. أ2014 American Humane Association. The American Humane Association Hero Dog Awards[trademark symbol] is a trademark of the American Humane Association\"-- Provided by publisher.
Current Perspectives on the Challenges of Implementing Assistance Dogs in Human Mental Health Care
by
Glenk, Lisa Maria
,
Foltin, Sandra
in
Accreditation
,
Americans with Disabilities Act 1990-US
,
Animal training
2023
The prevalence of mental health disorders, driven by current global crises, is notably high. During the past decades, the popularity of dogs assisting humans with a wide spectrum of mental health disorders has significantly increased. Notwithstanding these dogs’ doubtless value, research on their legal status, certification processes, training and management practices, as well as their welfare status, has been scarce. This scoping review highlights that in contrast to other assistance dogs such as guide dogs, there exists no consistent terminology to mark dogs that assist humans with impaired mental health. Legal authorities monitoring the accreditation process, training and tracking of mental health supporting dogs are broadly lacking, with only few exceptions. This review emphasizes the need to address several topics in the promotion of progress in legal and welfare issues related to assistance dogs as well as emotional support dogs for humans with a mental health disorder. The current body of knowledge was assessed in three different areas of focus: (1) the legal dimension including definitions and certification processes; (2) the dimension of performed tasks; and (3) the dog welfare dimension including aspects of the relationship with the handler and risks associated with children recipients. Considering the challenges associated with a mental health diagnosis, collaborations of dog provider organizations and health care professionals would be desirable to continuously assess the efficiency of the human-dog dyad regarding their overall compatibility, general satisfaction and mutual well-being.
Journal Article
My buddy
by
Osofsky, Audrey
,
Rand, Ted, ill
in
Muscular dystrophy Juvenile fiction.
,
People with disabilities Juvenile fiction.
,
Service dogs Juvenile fiction.
1994
A young boy with muscular dystrophy tells how he is teamed up with a dog trained to do things for him that he can't do for himself.
A revised taxonomy of assistance animals
by
Meade, B. Jean
,
Wirth, Oliver
,
Parenti, Lindsay
in
Agriculture
,
Animals
,
Animals, Domestic - classification
2013
The use of animals in various assistive, therapeutic, and emotional support roles has contributed to the uncoordinated expansion of labels used to distinguish these animals. To address the inconsistent vocabulary and confusion, this article proposes a concise taxonomy for classifying assistance animals. Several factors were identified to differentiate categories, including (1) whether the animal performs work or tasks related to an individual's disability; (2) the typical level of skill required by the animal performing the work or task; (3) whether the animal is used by public service, military, or healthcare professionals; (4) whether training certifications or standards are available; and (5) the existence of legal public access protections for the animal and handler. Acknowledging that some category labels have already been widely accepted or codified, six functional categories were identified: (1) service animal; (2) public service animal; (3) therapy animal; (4) visitation animal; (5) sporting, recreational, or agricultural animal; and (6) support animal. This taxonomy provides a clear vocabulary for use by consumers, professionals working in the field, researchers, policy makers, and regulatory agencies.
Journal Article