Journal Article Digest
Society & Animals Forum
Journal Digest


Digest 3

 

"Observations on Assistance Dog Training and Use"

Authors of original article: Raymond Coppinger, Loma Coppinger, and Ellen Skillings
Originally published in Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science
Volume 1, Number 2, 1998*

The most common relation we have with dogs is as companion animals -- as individuals who most people, when asked, count as members of their family. However, an estimated 10,000 dogs in the United States are working dogs who assist people with tasks they could not perform by themselves. Trained service dogs guide people who have sensory disabilities, alerting them to aspects of the environment, retrieving objects, pulling wheelchairs, opening doors, and the like. While some take the position that such use of animals is inherently exploitative, others argue that animals enter into such arrangements willingly and form a working relation with the needy person.

The authors, Coppinger, Coppinger, and Skillings, examined some of the common tasks that service dogs perform to determine the amount of physical stress they require. Specifically, they measured the physical force required to pull a wheelchair and to open a door. Regarding the wheelchair they found that the task required undue exertion by the dog. In fact, depending on how far, fast, and long and over what surface the chair is being pulled, this task requires more effort than the exertion of a sled dog, a use of dogs that has come under considerable criticism by animal advocates for the burden it imposes.

The authors also find that the harness used and the effort required by the person in the chair are problematic. Depending on the height of the door handle relative to the height of the dog, opening a door is also difficult and creates considerable discomfort.

In addition to being physically unpleasant and uncomfortable, these tasks are not ones that dogs are intrinsically motivated to perform. Dogs have to be continually verbally commanded and rewarded to perform these actions. In many of the authors= observations of them, people did not instruct their assistance dogs properly. While the dogs were highly trained, the people using them were novices.

To assure and enhanced the welfare of service dogs, they advise proper training of prospective handlers, a modification of equipment and tasks based on a better understanding of their physical complexities of the tasks, and a clearer appreciation of their instinctive behavior.

*Available from Psychologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, P.O. Box 1297, Washington Grove, MD 20880-1297; 301-963-4751.

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