Autism Assistance Dogs

February 13th, 2009 by admin

Your autistic child is not blind nor has a physical disability that renders them helpless, but most autistic children do lack the ability to make safe choices. Parents of autistic children are diligent, they have to be, but wouldn’t be safer and give the parents more peace of mind is there was an extra set of eyes watching their child. Now there is a service that provides canine assistance to autistic sufferers. 4Paws, the first autistic assistance dog agency, has dogs that can be placed with your autistic child and with a doctor’s approval no family can be turned away.

One of the most disturbing phenomena concerning autism is the child’s ability to just run away. You can be washing dishes and as soon as you turn your back your child can be gone. There are normal situations in which a autistic child can make very dangerous. They can fall into a pool or run into traffic and you would hardly know they were gone. An autistic assistance dog would alert you if your autistic child was to deviate from their normal pattern. Either by barking or by gaining your attention physically, the autistic assistance dog will give you enough warning to catch the child before they put themselves into danger.

Not only will the dog alert you that the child is missing but they will help you track and find the child. The bond between the child and dog is something special and that bond will instill the dog to protect and find your lost child. This relationship tends to be odd for more autistic children because the bonding process does not happen sometimes even if it is a human relationship. The communication process sometimes even excludes the parent from a loving relationship. Testimonials from parents who have received autistic assistance dogs say that they are amazed at how the animals and children interact.

Another benefit to both parents and the child is the parent’s report that the child has more feelings and compassion toward their dog then they do toward siblings or adults. The parents also state that once the dog is placed in the home, the autistic child shows less aggression and anger. In one case a parent said that there autistic child stopped showing frustration all together. Before the canine assistant the child would throw temper tantrums and physically attack the person they were angry at. Now the child, when frustrated, goes and hugs his dog until the anger goes away.

Another behavior that is trained to the assistant dog is to recognize repetitive behavior. If a child is prone to hand flapping as many autistic children demonstrate, it usually takes the touch of a parent to redirect the behavior. Now that is the dog’s responsibility. The dog will gently touch or nuzzle the child when the behavior happens and the child will learn through conditioned response that they are presenting a negative behavior and the behavior will stop.

The only reason that a dog will not be placed in your home is if your home is not suitable for the pet. The cleanliness of your home and your financial ability to own a pet is severely scrutinized. Also the safety of the pet is looked at. If your child is so violent that the dog may be injured because of a temper tantrum or other aggressive action, the agency has the right to deny you a dog or to pull the dog from your home. If you have a puppy that you would like trained to be an autism assistant dog, 4Paws does offer a school in which you, the child, and the dog will be taught to work together as a team.

Jonathan Sullivan
http://www.articlesbase.com/mental-health-articles/autism-assistance-dogs-503102.html

Category: temper tantrum :

7 Responses

  1. yardsalejunkee Says:

    What do you think about people who use Assistance Dogs?
    People who are disabled often use Assistance Dogs to help them out. Those dogs are often dogs like Guide Dogs, Service Dogs, Seizure Alert Dogs, Autism Dogs, Psychiatric Service Dogs and Mobility Dogs…just to name a few.

    How do you feel when someone with a dog like these comes into your business, or near you? Is it a good or bad thing and how do you react? Do you know the laws?

    I do…I just want to see your ideas/thoughts.:)

  2. oldgruffgrump Says:

    If the dog is properly trained, it's great … and the dogs are really awesome. It's amazing to watch an intelligent well-trained dog help a human.
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  3. delta s Says:

    We are all creatures created by God
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  4. CE S Says:

    I personally like to see the assistance dogs. I'm very glad that these people are fortunate to have such animals in their lives.

    I was on a subway in D.C. a couple of months ago, and a blind man got on the train with a guide dog. It was so heartwarming to watch how much the two took care of one another.
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  5. bzer67 Says:

    i see therapy dogs in my line of work often. They do the patients wonders (those who like animals in the first place).
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  6. cloothe Says:

    I think it is fabulous that the people who are so unfortunate to need these dogs are lucky enough to have been able to get one. In other words, the dogs are great, and we should all be sympathetic to the people who need to depend on them.
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  7. inri1968 Says:

    if these dogs are treated right and they are helping people out, it's a great set-up
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