By Janet Wenholz | Sr. Assistant to the Executive Director
OFP rescues dogs from shelters to matched them with veterans and others who need medical-alert service animals. We then teach these pairs together to become highly trained teams, at no charge to clients, Our cost averages $20,000 per team. Since 2010 we have accepted 462 applicants, and continue to receive requests every week from adults and children whose doctors have prescribed service dogs to help with various medical conditions.
The two questions we’re asked most often are, 1) “How do you choose the dogs to rescue for the program?” and 2) “How do you decide which dog gets matched with which client?” The answer to both is that it’s complicated, and to a very great extent down to OFP Founder Mary Cortani’s 45 years of military and civilian experience training working dogs and their handlers. Service dogs must want to interact with humans, and must be willing to overcome their innate tendency to interact with other dogs. Service dogs must actually ignore other dogs and focus on their handlers. Any dog that lives with other dogs is more likely to bond with them than with the humans in the household, even if the dogs don’t seem to get along with each other all the time. If the humans in the home have excellent leadership skills and the dogs are very obedient, the dogs’ primary allegiance is probably still to each other. Of course there are always exceptions, but this is one reason it can be very difficult to transition one animal in a multi-dog household into a service role.
Equally challenging is adding another dog to this multi-dog household, expecting it to bond with and work for the human to become a service animal that ignores other dogs. As for matching dog to client, we call that “Mary’s alchemy”. Staff members are always thrilled when we correctly guess the dog Mary chooses for a new client, AND can tell her the reasons for selecting that dog for that person. A combination of tasks the client needs the dog to do, personalities and energy of both human and dog need to be evaluated for the match to be successful. In most cases, the dogs are more flexible than the clients. As OFP's Founder and Executive Director Mary Cortani says, “You don’t get the dog you want; you get the dog you need.”
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