Service Dog Training NYC: A Step By Step Guide to getting your dog trained

Dogs are a common staple in U.S. households. In fact, as of 2020, there are approximately 90 million dogs in the USA. Most of these dogs are pets and compassion animals with no formal training, but a surprisingly large number also includes service dogs. In fact, there are over 500,000 service dogs living in the USA and assisting their owners.

Most commonly, when we hear service dogs, we think of seeing-eye-dogs for the blind, but there are actually many types of service dogs, such as psychiatric service dogs.

What is a Service Dog?

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U.S. Department of Justice as “dogs that are individually trained to do work or perform tasks for people with disabilities.” On a broader spectrum, a service dog is a licensed dog that provides assistance to a person with disabilities. These support dogs can provide assistance to people with mobility issues, emotional support, comfort for post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and much more. Out in public, these well behaved pups wear a vest to set them apart from regular pets.

As you can tell, there are many types of service dogs. Let’s go over the ones we will discuss in this article.

What is a Psychiatric Service Dog?

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Psychiatric service dogs help a person calm their mental issues and navigate the world. Some common conditions these dogs help with include PTSD, anxiety, ADHD, autism, etc. The tasks they help with vary owner from owner, as does service dog work in general, but these are just a few tasks they can do:

  1. Retrieve medicine and water and other items
  2. Provide affection and comfort during a panic attack or depressive episode
  3. Nudge to interrupt harmful behavior such as self harm, scratching, hair pulling, slapping, etc.
  4. Alert owner to heavy breathing, which could lead to an anxiety attack
  5. Offer grounding and stability support so owners don’t fall during attacks or episodes
  6. Summon help when needed

This is just a small list of the tasks these amazing service animals can do. They make life for people with disabilities much easier and provide comfort much like emotional support dogs.

Click the below video to learn more about psychiatric service dogs.

Psychiatric Service Dog Rights

Since PSDs require extensive, quality training, they are recognized as service dogs by the ADA and have certain rights, such as: