By Sally Colletti
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January 30, 2017
Unfortunately for families and parents of children like those described above, there is no break from this constant demand. Children and adults with the diagnosis of autism are unique in many ways: The child with Autism does not connect well with his or her environment. Autism manifests itself most strikingly as impairments in communication and in the formation of social relationships. Children with Autism are often nonverbal, or when they are verbal they usually do not use the skill to actively communicate with other people in their environment. Many children with this disability have a strong need for a structured, routine environment; change creates feelings of fear and/or anxiety. Some children even exhibit serious behavioral changes including, at times, self-injury. Another behavior common to Autism is a tendency to wander away. Parents often refer to their children as “Houdini,” stating they are able to escape from even the most secured environment and the family usually has multiple locks on every door and window in the home. When this happens, the child may be in a life-threatening situation, especially if they are already out of the physical sight of their caregiver. Children with Autism often don’t respond to their names consistently, if they respond at all. They rarely understand the many dangers in their environment; an approaching car or a stranger with ill intentions. Many parents report their greatest fears center on their child being missing or if they look away only for a minute; they will find their child gone or darting out into the path of an oncoming car. With the use of a Registered, Trained Service Animal, many families and adults living with autism are able to take their eyes off their child for a brief moment to attend to their other children, answer the phone or even use the bathroom alone! These parents are quite adept at creating opportunities for their children which in turn makes it so their children can remain living with them. To remain as an intact family with a developmentally disabled child is rare. Not only do these parents find a way for their child to remain in their care, saving the state millions of dollars over a lifetime, but found a way for their child to stay living at home and do so safely. The safety is the key. The dog requires specialized training costing thousands of dollars, but without this training, the dog will simply be nothing more than a pet; another living being for the parents to care for. A service dog’s sole purpose for a child with autism is to respond to the child in many ways, such as: The dog will interrupt the behavior of self-harming; social Isolation is lessened as the focus shifts to the dog, opens doors for socialization; enhances verbal skills by using commands for the dog; the dog will crawl onto the child's lap and calm the child; and lastly in LOCATING A LOST CHILD – The dog will have the ability to find child by various methods, i.e., tracking, area search, building search. This is NOT ordinary obedience training that an owner brings the dog to the local vet, vocational school or even use of a video can do. This is training that only a specialized behaviorist can do and the particular behaviorist chosen for this task requires travel on the part of the parents. The parents and anyone who interacts with the dog will need to undertake this type of training in order to ensure the dog’s purpose and role is carried at all times. This may include but not limited to: The parents, the child’s staff, the siblings, and of course the child himself will also participate at some point. The bottom line is safety. This canine companion plays an important role along with the use of locks, fences, 911 and tracking devices to keep a child with autism SAFE and HOME. Having this dog is much more than a pet. It is a large sacrifice on the part of the family. The family has already put all the locks, bolts, video monitoring, GPS devices and alarms on their home that they can. The potential for liability far outweighs the cost of the service dog. Lastly, I now have a Service Dog, for my son. As a dog lover and wanting to provide my son with all the opportunities available to him, a service dog was just the next logical step for our family. One company, located in NY State's Hudson Valley is BluePath Service Dogs and is highly recommended. If you are not in NY State or want a few other choices, try these: www.autismservicedogsofamerica.com ; www.autismassistancedog.com ; www.4pawsforability.org ,