Showing posts with label Service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Service. Show all posts

Saturday, September 28, 2013

The Reluctant Service Dog

Tag Archives: Seizure triggers







  Time for an update on service dog Lexus… We have come to lovingly refer to Lexus as “the reluctant service dog.”  Every time she sees/hears us pick up her harness (or service dog vest), she tucks tail and runs … Continue reading →




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Living life with Dravet Syndrome





  The past two years, I have run a half-marathon each summer for the Dravet Syndrome Foundation, part of their Race Towards a Cure RACRE (Research and Cure Refractory Epilepsy) series.  In 2011, I was the solo member for “Team … Continue reading →




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4 Paws Training Day 9- A bunch of dead dogs…





  I LOVE TRACKING!  It is just crazy how good these dogs are with this skill.  This morning’s training began with two more tracks of a missing Sydney.  My hip is feeling okay as long as I don’t try to … Continue reading →




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4 Paws Training Day 6- Family to the rescue!





This morning was bittersweet.  We, somewhat suddenly last evening, came up with a plan to send Aaron home.  This was done for various reasons, but the main reason was to help Sydney & Lexus bond better.  Aaron was quite the … Continue reading →




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4 Paws Training, Day 4- Success with seizure detection…sort of :-)





 Have no fear; we are here!  Although, we are VERY tired… We had a rough night.  Not really with Sydney this time.  Aaron must have decided that he wasn’t getting enough attention on this trip, so he decided to go … Continue reading →




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4 Paws training Day 3- And the tracking begins…





  Well, due to the first class in tracking this morning, Sydney & I took the morning off.  Paul & Lexus left to meet everyone at 4 Paws at 9:30 so they could head out to a big park that … Continue reading →




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4 Paws Training…Day 1- a very poopy (excuse me) puppy day!





  Hell.  That is as simple as I can put it.  Today was pure hell…at least for me.  Early morning started off well.  We actually got out of our hotel fairly quickly.  We arrived at 4 Paws for Ability 45 … Continue reading →




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The night (& days) before…..





  Well, it is 5 a.m.  The night before our first training day with Lexus, our 4 Paws for Ability service dog match.  I am blogging in the middle of the night because, well….Sydney just had a big, convulsive seizure … Continue reading →




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Meet Service Dog Lexus!!!





My apologies to my readers…When I signed on to write this new blog, I realized that I never posted on here about our little mix up with the original training dates.  (I figure most of you are connected with us … Continue reading →




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Service Dog Update!





So, it has been a little while since I have had the opportunity to update our blog.  There is pretty big news on the dog front! As many of you know, last year, we were fundraising for 4 Paws for … Continue reading →




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Help Fund A Service Dog | Medical Expenses - YouCaring.com

Help Fund A Service Dog | Medical Expenses – YouCaring.com.




Service Dog Fundraiser - Help Fund a Service Dog

Service Dog Fundraiser at Youcaring.com



Canines 4 Hope has begun a Service Dog Fundraiser through youcaring.com. All donations will be applied to the purchase of service dog for clients who want and need a service dog but may not have the funds available. Our goal is to always have the Service Dog Funds available so people do not have to wait to get on the road to the quality of life they deserve. We appreciate any and all donations as do our clients. Thank you!



A little bit about Canines 4 Hope and our Service Dogs and Service Dog Training services:

We are Canines 4 Hope, Certified Service Dog Trainers and we offer trained Service Dogs and Service Dog Training for children and adults with medical afflictions such as Diabetes, PTSD, Seizures and Autism. Our service dogs are trained to the specific medical needs of each person. Since medical insurance companies do not pay or reimburse for the cost of a medical service dog, many times our client’s have to make the hard decision to put their medical needs on hold while they attempt to save up for the purchase of the service dog. Our goal for this fundraiser is to help our clients get on the fast track to a better quality of life and with your help, we will use the money donated to help fund a service dogs for our clients.


We provide trained service dogs for people with limitations that require a dog to help with everyday tasks, early warning situations or companionship. Customized service dog training include:


Diabetic Service Dogs, also known as Hypo Alert Dogs are carefully trained to do the following:
• recognize the scent changes of hypoglycemia (low blood sugar)
• recognize breath scent changes of high blood sugar
• alert diabetic to take medicine
• retrieve glucose
• retrieve medication
• retrieve phone or dial 911Diabetic Alert Service Dog | Hypo Alert Dog


PTSD Service Dogs are trained to:
• Assistance in a medical crisis
• Provide treatment related assistance
• Assistance in coping with emotional overload
• Perform security enhancement tasks


PTSD Service Dogs can:
• help adjust serotonin levels
• help lower blood pressure
• help with episodes of depression
• provide companionship
• calm their handler
• preventing people from crowding around or rushing up on their handler


Autism Service Dogs
are trained to respond to the following symptoms:
• Impulsive Running – dog will help retrieve and get child back to parent
• Self Harming Behavior – dog will interrupt behavior and alert parent
• Awakening at Night – dog will bark to alert parents
• Interpret Mood Swings – dog will crawl into child’s lap to calm child
• Interrupt Social Isolation – child tends to focus on dog companionship
• Non-Verbal Child – child learns to give dog commands
• PICA – dog will stop child from eating inappropriate items
• Self Stimulation – dog can interrupt behaviorHelp Fund A Service Dog | Medical Expenses - YouCaring.com


Benefits of Having an Autism Assistance Dog
• Increased social interaction
• Redirecting repetitive behaviors
• Improved independence
• Increased vocabulary
• Improved quality of sleep
• Overall calming ability
• Recovering children quickly


Seizure Alert response dogs are trained to respond and help someone who has epilepsy or a seizure disorder. The seizure alert dog can:
• Summons help, either by finding another person or activating a medical alert or pre-programmed phone
• Pull objects away from the person’s body that may be potentially dangerous
• Block the individual with absence seizures and complex partial seizures from walking into obstacles, streets, and other dangerous areas that can result in bodily injury or death
• Attempt to rouse the unconscious handler during or after a seizure
• Provide physical support and emotional support
• Carry information regarding the dog, the handler’s medical condition, instructions for first responders, emergency medication, and oxygen
• Sense an impending seizure and their handler or care taker


Psychiatric Service Dogs help with psychiatric conditions such as:Psychiatric Service Dogs, Psychiatric Dog Training
• Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
• Bipolar Disorder
• Anxiety
• Severe Depression
• Panic Attacks
• Phobias
• Obsessive Compulsive Disorders


Psychiatric Service Dogs are trained to:
• Assistance in a medical crisis
• Provide treatment related assistance
• Assistance in coping with emotional overload
• Perform security enhancement tasks


We appreciate any help! With every dog we provide and with you’re help, we can help those in need of a service dog so they can get on the road to a quality of life they deserve.


Please feel free to visit our website:  canines4hope.com
To donate visit: Service Dog Fundraiser



Thursday, September 26, 2013

One of our Service Dog Registry members is in the news!

We’re proud to say one of our registrants is in the news! Darlene Guthrie, a retired Police Animal Control Officer uses her dog, Fancy, to help with her epileptic seizures. She’s been featured on local television news and in the newspaper.







Elkhart County Service Dog Displays a Unique Talent


by Tom Moore
South Bend Tribune Staff Writer




ELKHART — A dog left in a drop box at the Elkhart County Humane Society is making the most of a second chance at life.


Fancy, a 3-year-old Kai Ken-shepherd mix, was adopted by Darlene Guthrie in 2005, when Fancy was just 5 weeks old and weighed less than 3 pounds.


Guthrie, Elkhart Police Department’s animal rescue officer at the time, saw Fancy while dropping off a couple of other neglected dogs. It was love at first sight.


“She was so small; she looked like a kitten,” Guthrie recalled. “She kept batting her foot out of the cage. I picked her up and fell in love.”


But that was only the beginning. It wasn’t long until Guthrie noticed Fancy had a special talent — the ability to sense seizures in other dogs before they happen.


When Guthrie’s old Labrador dog began having seizures, Fancy would come to Guthrie and her husband.


“She’d come and get us and sit with the dog and us until it was over,” Guthrie said. “We just thought she was smart.”


Guthrie researched procedures to have a dog become a certified work dog and has been working with Fancy for the past several years. Fancy is registered with the United States Service Dog Registry and is considered a service dog.


But Fancy really did have a special talent, apart from being intelligent, and it wasn’t just sensing seizures in other dogs. Guthrie found that out when she developed epilepsy and began having seizures herself in September.


“I knew it was coming when she’d come up to me,” said Guthrie, who owns other dogs. “All you can do is lie down. She would actually stand over me, so my other dogs wouldn’t step over me. She literally stands over me and pushes the dogs off.


“I know I can trust her. I know exactly what she’s trying to tell me. I take her everywhere, now.”


Fancy would alert her owner about 15 seconds before a seizure, come over to her and start shaking.


Because of medication, Guthrie rarely has seizures anymore, but her condition did force her to retire recently from the Police Department, a job she loved for the past 20 years — 12 serving as the animal rescue officer.


Fancy is now Guthrie’s full-time service dog.


“Most service dogs do not want you to pet them,” Guthrie said. “Not because they’re not social, but because they’re working. But I have a sign around her in public that says, ‘I’m friendly, please pet me.’ ”





Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Seizure Service Dogs

Dogs are known for both their sense of smell and their loyalty. Both of these qualities are come in handy when the dog’s job is to care for their owner before, during and/or after a seizure.


There are different types of seizure service dogs; seizure alert, seizure response, and seizure assistance. The role of the seizure alert dog is to detect the impending seizure and signal the owner. Hopefully, this will give the person enough time to either take anti-seizure medication, or at least get to a place that minimizes potential dangers. This of course requires a strong relationship between the human and dog. They need to be able to read each others’ body language. The dog has to detect the subtle changes their owner might display before a seizure, meanwhile the human needs to understand when their dog is trying to warn them. This partnership could take time to develop and it is thought that over time, some dogs have been able to detect seizures using their sense of smell.



 Here’s one young girl’s story about her relationship with her seizure alert dog.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Service Dog Helps Detect, Stop Seizures - CBS Minnesota





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MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) – Service dogs are invaluable for the people they help. One service dog in Minneapolis not only helps his owner with the basics, but also uses technology to help keep her medical problem from getting out of control.


Brody is an 85-pound Labrador and he can alert his owner, Terri Krake, just before she has an epileptic seizures.


“My seizures were so intense they would sometimes last 40 minutes, they’re grand mal … I’m flopping on the floor like a fish for that 40 minutes,” Krake said.


Brody uses a magnet on his collar to trigger a device implanted in Terri’s chest that sends an electrical impulse to her brain, stopping the seizure.



“The VNS implant was implanted in September of 2008. It’s called a Vagus Nerve Stimulator. It is a pacemaker for the brain, if you will. If he alerts me to a seizure, I’ll have 10 or 15 seconds to lay flat, I just let gravity take its course,” explained Krake.


Brody was trained locally by Can-Do Canines to not only help the seizures to stop but to be there for Krake.


“He climbs across from my right to my left and does a snuggle,” said Krake. “He puts his nose up against my neck and by doing that, they’ve measured exactly where that magnet is gonna hit and it always hits the implant and knocks the seizure out within a minute.”


Krake’s implant fires every five minutes automatically, so her seizures are limited to five minutes.


But having Brody with her at all times means a seizure can be over in a matter of seconds. In the last year, Brody has fired her implant 55 times.




New Research Reveals More about Seizure, Diabetic, and Migraine Alert Dogs: But Are They Always Service Dogs? If There"s Doubt, Will a Doctor"s Letter Help?

Recent studies of dogs alerting in advance to migraines and radical shifts in blood sugar levels indicate that these are functions that are likely to become much more prevalent for service animals in the coming years. These skills, and the already well-known ability of some dogs to alert to the onset of epileptic and other seizures, present legal issues that not all of the federal regulatory agencies have fully considered. It is time to do some speculating on that, but I will begin by summarizing three recent studies.


Alerting Reported by Dogs of Migraine Sufferers in Survey


An online survey of migraine sufferers concerning their dogs’ behavior before and during migraine episodes revealed that slightly over half of those responding said they recognized changes in the behavior of their dogs prior to getting a migraine.


The researchers who reported on the survey results were Dr. Dawn Marcus of the Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Pittsburgh (whose therapy dog research was discussed here recently) and Amrita Bhowmick of Health Union in Philadelphia. They note that migraines are episodic disorders “with disabling attacks often preceded by subtle changes during the hours before the painful part of the attack, called the migraine predrome.” This predrome “includes changes in mood; food cravings; digestive symptoms, yawning, frequent urination; neck pain; and neurological symptoms (e.g., difficulty concentrating, dizziness, blurred vision, and sensitivity to noise or lights).”


In a prior (2012) study, Dr. Marcus had catalogued behaviors of pet dogs whose owners had migraines, some reporting changes up to 24 hours before the onset of migraine symptoms. The current survey was designed to obtain a broader sampling. Most participants (94.9%) were women, who typically had migraines less than 8 days a month, though some had chronic migraines occurring more than 15 days a month.


The most common behavior reported was “the dog refusing to leave the migraineur.” The following table describes the different types of alerting behaviors reported, and the time before initial migraine symptoms:





































































Alerting Behavior


Number (%)


Staring at migraineur


126 (27%)


Barking at migraineur


15 (3.2%)


Sitting on migraineur


103 (22.1%)


Refusing to leave migraineur’s side


364 (78.1%)


Whining


56 (12%)


Pawing at migraineur


101 (21.7%)


Other (e.g., licking, restricting usual activity level, herding migraineur to couch or bed)


130 (27.9%)


Duration between alerting behavior and initial migraine symptoms



0-15 minutes


52 (11.2%)


16-30 minutes


70 (15%)


31-60 minutes


65 (13.9%)


1 to 2 hours


60 (12.9%)


More than 2 hours before migraine


20 (4.3%)


Total identifying alerting behavior before symptoms of migraine attack began


267 (57.3%)


Migraine symptoms usually begin before noticing dog’s behavior


199 (42.7%)





Some participants only reported one behavior in the dog, but others reported more, some more than four behaviors. Over a third of participants who noticed changes in a dog’s behavior regularly began treatment for the migraine as a result of the dog’s alert. This argues strongly that dogs may be a valuable therapeutic addition to the regimen of a migraine sufferer.


UK Training Program for Seizure-Alert Dogs


Stephen Brown of the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry in Cornwall, England, was one of the first medical researchers to look at dogs whose behavior was recognized as changing prior to the onset of a seizure of someone close to them, usually the master. He and a colleague, Laura Goldstein of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London, describe the training regimen of dogs that are being paired with persons with epilepsy. This is the program being implemented by Support Dogs of Sheffield. The patient and the dog are admitted to an assessment center for three weeks, during which:


“The dog is trained to make an extreme focus on the person’s face, referred to as ‘look at me’ training. When a seizure occurs, the dog is rewarded. The reward, administered by the trainer, is usually a food treat that varies with dog, and this particular reward is only used for seizures. Depending on how many seizures occur, the dog may or may not be acquiring a seizure alert pattern after three weeks.”


The patient and the dog then go home, but video cameras record daily activities in the home. The dog should be alerting to seizures within two months of living with the patient. Dogs vary in what they do to alert, but Strong and Goldstein state that “in a typical premonitory alerting behaviour the dog will seek out the person and engage their attention by getting in their field of vision, staring at them and sometimes barking.”


The trainers of Support Dogs of Sheffield “regard the mean anticipation period for tonic-clonic seizures to be about 30 min, but shorter times, in the order of 15 min are observed with complex partial seizures. The action taken by the human after the dog alerts varies, and may for example include lying down and placing a cushion under the head, or going to lie on a bed.”


There is nothing psychic about what is going on. The researchers report that those “with knowledge of the field have been occasionally approached by journalists for opinions about psychic abilities of dogs,” some reporters suggesting that psychic ability must explain dogs that alert from other rooms than where the patient is. The researchers respond that “a dog situated in another room in the house typically enters the room and appears to check the human every 15 min or so,” and this happens whether the patient is awake or asleep. This attentiveness, rather than psychic ability, explains what is happening. Also, some dogs will go to other rooms to try to get help for the person suffering from a seizure.


As to what dogs sense when they alert, these researchers state that the “consensus from those who spend time reviewing the video evidence is that dogs probably alert to specific and subtle human behavior.” They note it is possible that dogs may detect changes in respiratory rate or even heart rate, or may detect a change in the master’s smell. Cats might conceivably detect oncoming seizures, but “the typical response of a cat would be to run away rather than stay with the person and this makes them less suitable for the role of an alert animal.”


The program costs £10,000 (about $ 15,000).


Large-Scale Diabetic-Alert Dog Study to Begin


Another online survey was conducted by scientists at the Behavioral Medicine Center at the University of Virginia and concerned diabetic-alert dogs. The survey gathered information from 36 diabetic-alert dog owners, 23 parents of children and 13 adults with type 1 diabetes. Over 90% of respondents reported dogs alerting to hypoglycemic episodes. Many reported significant decreases in the frequency of severe and moderate hypoglycemia since obtaining such a dog. Most also reported decreased worry about hypoglycemia and greater participation in physical activities after getting a dog. Dr. Linda Gonder-Frederick, the leader of this research team, has advised me that she will be undertaking a large-scale study of the effectiveness of seizure-alert dogs.


Legal Issues with Medical Alert Dogs


In the nature of a law school hypothetical, consider the following fact pattern:


Sarah is a diabetic and has several times gone into diabetic comas. She keeps insulin on hand at all times. She begins to notice that her pet Sheltie tries to push her to sit or lie down from ten to thirty minutes before her blood sugar gets dangerously high or low, with the result that she usually tests herself right away. She credits the dog with alerting her enough in advance that she has had a significant reduction in the number of episodes. She has never trained the dog.


Is this a service animal under federal regulations? It might depend on what agency you ask.


Taking a Medical Alert Dog into a Restaurant


The Department of Justice has issued regulations regarding the rights of individuals with disabilities to bring service animals into places of public accommodation, such as restaurants, theaters, motels, etc. DOJ defines a service animal as “any dog that is individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability, including a physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual, or other mental disability.” DOJ provides examples of services that service animals can perform, including “assisting an individual during a seizure, alerting individuals to the presence of allergens….” (28 CFR 36.104, emphasis added)


In the 2008 release accompanying this regulation, DOJ noted that a service animal can provide “minimal protection” by doing such things as “alerting and protecting a person who is having a seizure.” The release also refers to “protecting the handler from injury resulting from seizures or unconsciousness.” (75 Fed. Reg. 56266, September 15, 2010) The latter phrase might arguably cover a situation where a dog alerts in advance of a seizure beginning, but it is certainly not explicit.


So, is Sarah’s untrained seizure-alert dog a service animal under DOJ regulations? Arguably not, since it is not “individually trained” to perform the task of alerting, even though that task is for the benefit of a person with a disability. An argument could be made, however, that Sarah’s dog should qualify for admission to a place of public accommodation since it will alert her to a threat in time to take action that will reduce the risks associated with the likely episode.


Bringing an Alert Dog into the Cabin of a Commercial Flight


The Department of Transportation includes diabetes in a list of “physical or mental impairments” (73 Fed. Reg. 27667, May 13, 2008). The same release states:


“Generally, a service animal is individually trained to perform functions to assist the passenger who is a qualified individual with a disability. In a few extremely limited situations, an animal such as a seizure alert animal may be capable of performing functions to assist a qualified person with a disability without individualized training. Also, an animal used for emotional support need not have specific training for that function. Similar to an animal that has been individually trained, the definition of a service animal includes: An animal that has been shown to have the innate ability to assist a person with a disability; or an emotional support animal.”


In guidance issued for airlines, DOT defines a service animal as “[a]ny animal that is individually trained or able to provide assistance to a qualified person with a disability or any animal shown by documentation to be necessary to support a passenger with an emotional or mental disability.” (77 Fed. Reg. 39804, July 5, 2012).


Therefore, Sarah’s dog satisfies DOT’s understanding of “service animal” for purposes of going into a cabin of a commercial airplane. Should Sarah get a letter from a medical professional? Letters can be required for psychiatric and emotional support animals under 14 CFR 382.117(e), but that regulation provides that the letter is to state that the “passenger has a mental or emotional disability recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders—Fourth Edition (DSM IV).” Since this is not the case with many alerting functions of dogs, the letter is not required. Nevertheless, I think it is a good idea if Sarah’s physician is willing to write it. First, it will add convincing evidence that the dog is really a service animal, not a pet that Sarah is trying to fly with in the cabin. Second, if the dog is not as well behaved as it should be, the airline staff will be less likely to invoke their right to exclude it because of disruptive behavior.


Migraines can be associated with mental illness or not, but because DOT has not referred to migraine-alert dogs in its Federal Register releases, I would recommend getting a letter for such a dog in any case.


Living with an Alert Dog


Fran Breitkopf and I analyzed the complex area of assistance animals in housing law in an article in the American Bar Association’s general practice journal, GP Solo, some years ago, which we have supplemented here on occasion. Although there are different issues at play depending on the type of housing involved, generally speaking a reasonably well-behaved assistance dog, after whom the owner picks up and keeps from disturbing the neighbors, will be entitled to a reasonable accommodation. If an apartment owner or co-op board is particularly adamant about a no-pets policy, a letter from a medical professional could be important.


For what medical professionals should include in a letter for a patient with a medical alert animal in any of the contexts discussed above, see the article that Dr. J. Lawrence Thomas and I recently wrote for the Journal of Forensic Psychology Practice, Writing Letters to Help Patients with Service and Support Animals. All of the eight issues that we list for a psychologist or psychiatrist to consider before writing such a letter are as important for a medical doctor or other professional who is not treating a patient for a psychological condition. See So What Can Psychologists Say, and What Should They Say? beginning on page 111 in the journal.


Possibility for Fraud


I was recently asked what kind of dog I would say Chloe is if I wanted to fake service dog status and, say, get her into a restaurant. After thinking for a minute, I said that I would probably call her an alert dog, perhaps a migraine alert dog. I have no obvious physical disabilities and Chloe, a highly obedient therapy dog, would not be expected to demonstrate any skill on the spot. If traveling, such a dog would make it easier to get around not having a letter from a psychologist. If asked what she does, I would explain that she paws my knee upon detecting that I may be about to have an episode. There would be no real way to check this.


This is what concerns many trainers in the service dog industry. Not all people who think like this—and unfortunately some do—will have dogs as obedient and socialized as Chloe. Disruptions by poorly trained or bogus service dogs make it harder for well-trained service dogs to be accepted in public environments. Even if an untrained animal might qualify for service dog status under the law, owners should respect the fact that other service dog users have highly trained animals that have worked long and hard to belong in public environments. (News reports recently described a dog trainer whose business ran afoul of various state authorities in New York. The trainer had been claiming to train dogs to alert to oncoming seizures.)


Conclusion


I was recently contacted by a family with a dog that recognizes the onset of precipitous and dangerous drops in blood pressure suffered by a member of the family. I wanted to know if there was any literature on this and sent out emails to some of the authors of the studies above and others. There appears to be no research on this phenomenon at present, but I have no reason to doubt that it is actually happening. Anecdotal accounts on some of the websites associated with hypoglycemia alert dogs indicate that other people are noticing the same thing when their blood pressure drops. If this continues to be observed, I suspect that it will in time be studied and perhaps a new branch of the service dog industry will begin.


I strongly recommend that people who have animals that begin to spontaneously alert to medical conditions have the dogs trained. Early studies found that dogs became so distressed at the onsets of severe seizures that they sometimes injured themselves or attacked people nearby. A few dogs even died. It is a good idea, in my opinion, to reward a dog for specific behaviors in advance of a seizure so that the alerting pattern becomes consistent. Training is also important for teaching an owner to understand how to work with a dog that is providing such an important service. More important for some, training will likely insulate the dog against claims that it is not really a service animal.


Thanks to Dailyah Rudek, Bart Sherwood, Fran Breitkopf, and Ronald Keats for comments and corrections.


Sources:


Brown, Stephen W., and Goldstein, L.H. (2011). Can Seizure-Alert Dogs Predict Seizures? Epilepsy Research, 97, 236-242.


Ensminger, J., and Breitkopf, F. (2009). Service and Support Animals in Housing Law. GP Solo, 26(5).


Gonder-Frederick, Linda, Rice, Pam, Warren, Dan, Vajda, Karen, and Shepard, J. (April 2013). Diabetic Alert Dogs: A Preliminary Survey of Current Users. Diabetes Care, 36(4), e47, doi.so.2337/dc12-1998.


Marcus, Dawn A. (February 2012). Canine Responses to Impending Migraines. Journal of Alternative and Complimentary Medicine, 18(2), 106-108.


Marcus, Dawn A., and Bhowmick, Amrita (2012). Survey of Migraine Sufferers With Dogs to Evaluate for Canine Migraine-Alerting Behaviors. Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine (in press).


Studies prior to 2010 are summarized in Service and Therapy Dogs in American Society, particularly at pp. 64-72.