Honestly I did TONS of research online, and I had done basic training for all of my other dogs. The hardest part to training a service dog is public access. There is a book out there calling training a psychiatric service dog. Now there is a difference between an Emotional Support Animal (ESA) and a Service Dog (SD). An ESA just provides emotional support and can live with you in non-pet friendly houses/apartments and can fly with you. A SD performs tasks for you and needs to be "prescribed" by your doctor. Some tasks are:
-alerting to panic attacks, flashbacks, dissociation.
-grounding or deep pressure therapy. This can be done sitting or laying down. The dog gets on your lap/chest and basically the weight of them helps ground you and bring you back. Some dogs will also lick you to help.
-for people who are hyper vigilant about entering places, the dog can be trained to search the room or house for other people.
-"cover" which is where the dog is trained to sit behind, in front, to the side of you and provide space between you and other people.
-interrupt bad behaviors by redirecting (i.e. getting their brush or a ball to play with or groom).
-check with periodically to break any dissociative spells.
These are just some, Bristol does them all except for the checking house. She does however walk in front of me in stores and I can tell by her reaction if someone is about to come out of an aisle. She also provides counter balance when I have dizzy spells from head injury.
The dog HAS to perform some tasks to mitigate your disability to be a SD. Like maybe for your agoraphobia, the cover tasks would work good to give you space. It takes a
LOT of work to train the dog. Despite how I am feeling, I have to do some training with Bristol EVERYDAY, whether it is just basic obedience/tasks or going to wal-mart and doing some public access training. Right now we are working on her doing quiet down stays for class and restaurants. She also has barrier frustration where she sees other dogs and wants to go to them. I am working with a professional on this because if I cannot get her over it, I will have to "wash her out" which basically means end her training to be a SD. The dog must be friendly, but yet not easily distracted.
If you can get your doctor to prescribe you a note to have a SD and Annie can be trained, then I think she will change your life! You can get vests off ebay or amazon. I got Bristol's from workingservicedogs . com.
If you have any other questions I can try to answer,
@Justmehere has also trained her own SD, as others on this site.
Sorry for any typos, it's been a rough day and Bristol keeps laying her head on my hand while typing. She likes to maintain some form of contact, especially when its been like the past few days/2 weeks! She takes her "grounding" tasks VERY seriously as you can see in the picture. Sorry it is sideways! ;)