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View Full Version : Special Needs Children Can Need Assisted Therapy & Service Dogs, Too




OneMoreTime
11-28-2006, 11:03 PM
Most Assistance Dog Programs refuse to work with special needs children, anyone under the age of 18. Those training & placement organizations are solely for adults. Even for organizations willing to work with children, the cost of a professionally trained dog is expensive (can be up to $15,000) and sometimes the waiting list is as much as 7 years. Do investigate all the programs available to you before choosing one. And consider your family's willingness to commit to having an extra lifetime member of the family. Who sheds. And is large. And needs walks and exercise. :p


http://arfkids.com/nav/side_starschool.jpg


One of the programs that works with children is ARFkids, a 301C (charitable) organization specifically created to address the training assistance needs of the families of Special Needs Children. PetCo (http://www.PetCo.com (http://www.petco.com/)) is their largest corporate supporter.


ARFkids Mission
To help children nationwide....


By providing a Pet Assisted Therapy or Service Dog Candidate Puppy to Special Needs children, ages 8-18, that will be specifically trained by the recipient family, with assistance from ARFkids, to aid in the improvement of the quality of life of the child. This makes obtaining an Assistance or Service dog affordable.
http://www.ARFkids.org (http://www.arfkids.org/)

DO NOTE that with ARFkids.org THE TRAINING IS DONE BY THE FAMILY with this type of program, so you, too, will be trained by trained volunteers and you will have the support and advice of an online group. This is what makes the program affordable.


ARFkids.org says -
Applicant families are urged to seriously consider the
very time consuming and daily training schedule associated
with participating in the ARFkids In-Home Training Program
Completed PRIOR to making Application.


Details of the ARFkids.org Pet Assisted Therapy and Service Dog Program

http://arfkids.com/images/Rinvest100.jpg

This is taken directly from the ARFkids website.
Please visit them to learn more or review an application.
http://www.ARFkids.org (http://www.arfkids.org/)

Each specially selected ARFkids Pet Assisted Therapy or Service Dog Candidate Puppy has been temperament and trainability tested and designated as a candidate for the ARFkids In-Home Training Program. The Pet Assisted Therapy or Service Dog Candidate puppy will be trained by the recipient family with assistance from volunteer ARFkids Training Partners and through an Online support group made up of trainers and ARFkids families.

Pet Assisted Therapy and Service Dog Candidate puppies are donated to ARFkids by Rin Tin Tin incorporated. The puppies, from the authentic and well known Rin Tin Tin bloodline, are sound in both mind and body capable of serving your child for many years.

ARFkids pioneered an In-Home Training Program to allow families to actively participate in the training of the Pet Assisted Therapy or Service Dog for their child. This concept ensures a strong life-long and consistent bond between the dog and the family and significantly reduces the costs associated with securing a working dog.
The ARFkids Pet Assisted Therapy or Service Dog Candidate is placed with the family at age 8 weeks following a series of extensive Trainability/Temperament Testing.

ARFkids is staffed by volunteers who dedicate their time and efforts toward the successful placement and training of ARFkids Pet Assisted Therapy and Service Dog candidates to assist children ages 8-18 in achieving as much independence as possible in their daily lives.

ARFkids goal is to negate the extraordinarily long waiting lists and exorbitant costs of some Pet Assisted Therapy and Service Dog organizations and provide dogs to children as early as possible at an affordable cost to families. Some organizations pose waiting lists of up to 7 years and charge fees in excess of $15,000.

ARFkids waiting list is about a year. The donation required for a Pet Assisted Therapy Dog candidate puppy is $1,000 and $2,500 for a Service Dog candidate puppy, plus a $25 non-refundable application donation.

Applicant families are urged to seriously consider the very time consuming and daily training schedule associated with participating in the ARFkids In-Home Training prior to making application.




Lara
12-03-2006, 04:00 PM
There was a touching story on the television here last night about assistance dogs for children. They said that it costs on average 25,000 AUD to train an assistance dog here. :eek:
If I find the story online here I'll post it. Was excellent and touching and I certainly would donate to this cause.

[Found the Assistance Dogs Australia site (http://www.assistancedogs.org.au/about.html) and they say cost is approx. 20,000 AUD. Just thought I should post that correction. They also say they only have 180 in service in all of Australia. That's pretty small number when you think about it.]

Lara
12-05-2006, 02:18 PM
From email from US Autism & Asperger Association, Inc.
December 4 , 2006
Service dog placements for children with autism;
North Star Foundation is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to place assistance dogs with children who face challenges. To date they have helped over seventy-five families around the country to meet their children's social, emotional and educational goals through the use of well-bred and trained North Star dogs.

Service Dog Placements for Children with Autism
Creating a service dog placement for a child with autism differs from creating placements between service dogs and physically challenged adults. From puppy hood on, the philosophy of training the dog and the timetable for placement has to be tailored to the unique needs of the child and move in tandem with the dog's natural development.

In traditional service animal programs, dogs are placed with human partners when the dogs are approximately two years of age, and they arrive fully trained. New owners learn handling skills within the space of two or three weeks. At North Star, we create placements when the dog is still a puppy, in order to facilitate the strongest bond possible, and to insure the dog's training matches the child's needs.

more at
http://www.northstardogs.com/autism.shtml

OneMoreTime
12-05-2006, 08:20 PM
Have copied out the links from the North Star Foundation
home page, hoping it will encourage you to Visit, Learn
and Spread the Word to Parents of Autistic Children --

http://www.northstardogs.com/images/justin-frontimage.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/success.shtml)

http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/about.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/mission.shtml)
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/autismdogs.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/autism.shtml)
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/services.gif
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/articles.gif
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/success.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/success.shtml)
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/videos.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/videos.shtml)
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/news.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/northstarnews.shtml)
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/books.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/books.shtml)
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/donate.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/donation.shtml)
http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/links.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/links.shtml)


Article: Helping Children Find Their Way (http://www.northstardogs.com/children.shtml)


http://www.northstardogs.com/includes/indeximages/newsletter.gif (http://www.northstardogs.com/newsletter.shtml)
The North Star Foundation is 100% supported by donations

Pamster
03-26-2007, 06:51 PM
I have wondered if it would be worth getting a service dog for my autistic son, he can be so darn unpredictable and aggressive I just hate the idea of putting an animal through what I know he is capable of doing...I would be interested to see other's who'd gotten service dogs for their kids, but I am not ready to make this kind of a committment yet. ;)

While surfing around I discovered this site with special needs service dogs:

http://www.4pawsforability.org/index.html

We just may come to a point in our lives where this might be possible but right now it's not. Anyone here have a service dog for their special needs child? :)

pandorasbox20
09-18-2007, 02:42 PM
I have a purebred doxie pup 3 months that i would like to donate to a foundation that trains for special needs children. i am having a hard time finding one to call. If anybody knows please contact me. thanks

Chemar
09-18-2007, 06:52 PM
hi and what a wonderful gesture :)

I am going to copy your post to our Child Health forum as well as our classifieds board here too

welcome to NeuroTalk :)

dllfo
01-15-2008, 05:46 AM
My wife works with a local church that helps people train their own dog. It is so rewarding to see the look on a person's face when their very own pet becomes a partner in life.

My wife trained our Portuguese Water Dog for me and she is a Godsend. I drop my crutch...no problem. I tell her to bring it and she does.

When my wife had her knee replaced last February, she trained our 'Fur Kid" to take the clothes out of the dryer, put them in a basket, then pull the basket all the way to our bedroom -- some 80 feet away.

I am not sure about listing the name of the church, don't want to break any forum rules, but I was told more and more churches are doing this.

Take Care.......

Doody
01-15-2008, 10:16 AM
Hi dllfo. I'm sitting here smilling at the picture of your fur kid helping with the laundry.

That's wonderful that all the work put into the training has turned out so well! :hug: