• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Getting A Service Dog.

However when I first submitted the forms and got the process rolling I was two years plus younger (and that's getting to be meaningful at my age) and I've now been diagnosed with a serious illness and I'm getting treatment for that.... aside from the ptsd and I have my other disability too. Aaargh I'm a wreck maybe too wrecked now...

As long as you have a plan for proper exercise, grooming, feeding, playing, and training and as long as you are willing to learn and willing to continue the training for the rest of the dog's working life and contract (I'm sure) to stay in contact with them and call them if any issues arise, I think you'll be fine. Even if the exercise and grooming plans are by someone else. That doesn't matter. The training needs to be by you as you are learning to become a team with the dog but that's what they are typically looking for. Plus personality matches. Can you become a team with this dog? But, I think they try their best to match personalities when they pick a dog for you so, don't worry so much! People with more then just PTSD have service dogs. Very sick people have service dogs. Successfully.
 
Thank you @lostforgottensoul - you make so much sense and give good practical advice. Of course I will be ok... I'm gonna make it so... ....sigh.... I am going to love bonding with my dog. I am so looking forward to his company and help. He is going to make a massive difference to my life and I suppose until he arrives and we can start living together I feel like I am wasting time. But there are a few things I must get done around the house too... so no better excuse to do so now.

I've had two other significant dog relationships in my life... one as a small child... about 8 years old I reckon. A bitch had a litter and dad was going to destroy them. So I snuck out in the middle of the night and grabbed this little brown ball and hid him until the deed was done. I smuggled him to school and put him back with his mother at night and whenever no-one was looking. Obviously I got into a shit tonne of trouble about it all... got a belting and then was left to 'look after' him. He was a smashing good dog. It ended badly though. One day whilst I was at school.. and by now my pup was an adolescent.. there was an clearing auction on a nearby Station.... mum and dad took my pup and sold him. Devastation doesn't even come near to describing my feelings. There's a lot more to it than just this but that's the guts of it I suppose.

My second dog I had for sixteen years. He died in 2009. I haven't been in the right place in any sense of the word, to care for a dog - until now. Then my doctor suggested I get a SD rather than a pet. Great idea for so many reasons but a hell of a long wait.
 
I think a lot of your planning for the dog should be guided by them, in combination with your current life situation.

For example: by 2 years old, they have a feeding schedule that they have decided works for this dog. Wouldn’t change that. Would simply ask for specifics so you can implement the same feeding regime at home: is it brekky and dinner, or just dinner? Is doggo on dry food, raw food, etc? How much, and what brands? (You may not be able to easily access the same brand, but a pet shop will be able to direct you to a par alternative).

Exercise: plan for regular (preferably daily) exercise, but make sure it’s doable. Don’t say you’re going to walk the dog an hour each morning if one of the reasons you’re getting the dog is you can’t leave the house for more than 10 minutes;) I’d ask them about the dog’s current exercise routine, because at 2 years old, some handlers will be tapering down from a program specifically designed to limit injury to the growth plates. So, have a plan, but ask about their current program so that it’s a minimal change for doggo.

Have your preferred vet practice picked out , but ask who they currently use. Even if you can’t attend that practice, if it’s a chain like Greencross, they can transfer records to your nearest Greencross.
Have a few emergency numbers written down (theirs, your vet’s, a 24 hour vet service, and the address of the nearest 24 hour pet emergency centre if you live in a major city).

Dog sleeping area: inside or outside? If inside, have a plan for overnight toileting (do you need to get up, or will you have a dog door, or is the dog potty trained, or do you leave your back door open anyway, etc).

Have a worming & parasite (ticks and fleas) plan ready, but cross check it with the one they are currently using.

To look super ready? Perhaps ask about what dental treats they use, and maybe even home-make some “Canine Enrichment” activities to show that dog’s overall well-being and quality of life are a priority for you.

I’m assuming they’ve already ticked off things like suitability of your home environment (like gates and fences).

If you have other animals in the house, that requires seperate planning.

Paperwork you want to ask for should include council registration, microchip (so you can add your contact details to the database), and vet records (they’ll have a vaccination card with the vac history).

A reassuring question for them? “How often does doggo currently get washed, and can you tell me which shampoo you use?” Some handlers are really big on natural-product only shampoo, but some prefer medicated shampoo. Some dogs need allergy shampoo, etc.

I recently cancelled my pet insurance. I have more set aside for my dog’s emergency medical costs than I was entitled to under the policy, and so far I haven’t found a policy that was any better than the one I had. I have a budget for my pet expenses ready for my NDIS plan, which is also helpful, because “Can I afford my dog?” is not something I need to worry about if I stick to his budget (and because I’m just one of those people, its micromanaged - right down to 3 poo bags per day, and an allowance for new enrichment toys, etc!).

You aren’t supposed to get all these things right first time. But if you’re concerned about whether they think you’re committed and willing to learn? Having considered these things ahead of time, and asking them about what the dog’s current treatment/exercise/bedding/worming/diet regime is so you can reduce any substance changes? That’s rock solid evidence that you’re going to be a committed and responsible handler.

You got this:)

ETA I think I even freaked myself out with all that! You don’t need to reinvent the wheel for this dog. You don’t need to know what food this dog needs/prefers/refuses to eat, what treats they prefer, the exercise this dog needs. Asking them sensible questions and taking notes? Coming from a place of “I’ve done my research, but I want to ask the person who already knows the dog what works best...”? That’s gonna be enough.
 
Last edited:
I recently cancelled my pet insurance. I
Funny - I was just thanking heaven that I have pet insurance. :laugh: It has paid for itself within the first 3 months each year just in Sampsons allergy pills alone. And all this unexpected cardiac stuff? I pay 500 bucks a year for pet insurance and only spent $120 on a $1200 bill, so even adding it together I've paid $620 instead of $1200. We still have more appointments and testing ahead of us and this could easily end up being $5000 or more by the time it's done.

It was so nice to be able to say to the vet -- do whatever you need to because I have great coverage and not have to worry about raiding my savings account.
 
Thanks @Sideways - I've made a list from your suggestions. Some I've done but others I hadn't even thought of so I'm getting them organised as far as I can without actually having the dog with me.

I'm not so sure about pet insurance either. I tend to be a person who saves my money for emergencies (rainy day) but also I see where having it could be hugely helpful as in @Freida's dog. Hmm.. Need to think on that one.

Thank you everyone....
 
Funny - I was just thanking heaven that I have pet insurance. :laugh: It has paid for itself within the first 3 months each year just in Sampsons allergy pills alone. And all this unexpected cardiac stuff? I pay 500 bucks a year for pet insurance and only spent $120 on a $1200 bill, so even adding it together I've paid $620 instead of $1200. We still have more appointments and testing ahead of us and this could easily end up being $5000 or more by the time it's done.

Not to get off topic and if it is off topic please feel free to ignore this question but what brand do you have?

There's so many out there and so many that's worthless.
 
I use Healthy Paws and can't say enough good things about them. They make the claims process super easy, pay me back within days, and even sent me an email asking how SDs cardiology appointment went. They rate their costs based on breed (some dogs are known to have more issues) and how old the dog is, then the rate raises as they get older. I started at ...35 a month I think? 5 years later it's 40 so it's not great leaps in cost.

And their policies make sense -- that was the best thing! :laugh:
 
Even if you plan on putting money aside each month, this takes a little while to accumulate.

We had a pet emergency earlier this year and were within a couple of thousands within the blink of an eye. Since then I have pet insurance for the younger ones (ironically, the one with the emergency was already too old to sign up, unfortunately).

Our pet insurance also pays for chronic medication etc. Our youngest was diagnosed with early-stage asthma at the beginning of the year, before we had insurance. Unfortunately, now it's a pre-existing condition, but if it wasn't and she'd eventually become symptomatic, they'd be the - really pricey - meds.

Same with diagnostics. The examination for heart-related things alone easily reaches 1k really fast, and that's not even including any treatment.

I'd never go without insurance anymore. (we have Trupanion with the $200 deductible plan and 10% co-pay)
 

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom