@EveHarrington - couldn’t disagree more.
People should reach for treatment modalities that work for them. Getting a service dog? And being a responsible service dog owner? Can make huge positive changes to a person’s life. If that’s going to bring about big changes that work for them, in preference to other treatment options like medication? I honestly can’t see why getting a service dog should be considered a last resort.
For me personally? I wish getting an Assistance Dog had been put to me as a real option years ago. I could very well have avoided serious suicide attempys if I’d had the benefit of my dog earlier in my recovery (I haven’t made an attempt since, you guessed it, I got my dog), not to mention avoiding the risks of trying ECT, and countless disastrous medication trials, some of which have done lasting damage to my physical health (especially my teeth...thanks lithium).
Having my dog has basically ended my previous heavy reliance on inpatient care - I got a dog, and finally became independent. Before my dog? I (literally) spent years as an inpatient. I was averaging about a quarter of every year being hospitalised. Quite apart from the benefit to me? That inaptient care costs a fortune. A fortune of health care that could have gone to someone else...if I’d just gotten my dog sooner.
A service dog, managed responsibly, doesn’t need to be a major imposition on anybody other than the handler. And the potential benefits to the sufferer are almost limitless. To me, it’s about promoting responsible service dog ownership and ensuring handlers have adequate training and support. Discouraging what, for me, has
easily been the most effective treatment (not to mention the most cost effective) until a sufferer has sufficiently endured enough other treatment modalities? Can’t understand that approach at all.