My dog is one of the biggest components of my treatment-he helps calm me down and be more emotionally...
I have had a legal PTSD service dog ( he is also trained in mobility) for 7 years.
Few things. You must be disabled to the point that the dog will help you do things you can not with out him. You need to speak with your doctor. It sounds like you can go out and leave him home, yes it may be uncomfortable and hard but you can. Me on the other hand had something make my PTSD and anxiety so bad that before my doctor perscribed the dog I did not leave my house for over two weeks. My mom came checked I was way out of food and starving and hiding in my room. So you see I could not leave.
Once the dog came he was an ESA, Emotional Support animal while I trained him around my house ( my mom did my shopping) once his obedience was perfect (to be covered under the law they must have exellent obedience) I was able to teach him some tasks (again by law they must do tasks to mediate your condition. A dog just being there or snuggling does not count for public access) then I was able to start using him as a service dog in training in public, I trained in parks this got me closer to people. Finally his obedience was exellent everywhere and he would do his tasks all the time, even with distractions. I went slow but I can now go out in public with hom.
Just remember that taking out a fake service dog is against the federal law.
Oh and there is no legal ID, paperwork or certification. But you must be able to prove its a service dog if you end up in court. Meaning showing its training
Hi, I am new here and just scanning post. I too have been considering a service dog. So have been researc...
You can self train if you have experience. Mine is and I am training my new one (my first one is old.) Do not fall for those that say you have to have paperwork, id or certification. By ADA law none is needed and it is illegal for anyone to even ask
Yes and no. There are no legal standards, there are no registries, ect.
There are accreditation bodies,...
There are many legal standards. A service dog must perform tasks, have exellent obedience, ignore all other distrations, absolutly no aggression, never sniff food at a resturaunt etc.....