CRISPE Forum
May 18, 2013, 07:45:15 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
News: Welcome to the CRISPE Forum
 
   Home   Help Contact Us! Donate Now Search Calendar Staff List Login Register  

Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: The Department of Defense is testing canine therapy as a treatment for post-trau  (Read 299 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Katy Mills
Hero Member
*****

Karma: 158
Posts: 689


Hold the courts responsible to families!

2147483647
View Profile
« on: April 19, 2012, 02:03:13 PM »

The Department of Defense is testing canine therapy as a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

From: Joseph R. John [mailto:jrjassoc@earthlink.net]
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2012 8:29 PM
To: jrj@combatveteransforcongress.org
Subject: Combat Veterans For Congress

 

We have made contact with the Helen Woodward Animal Shelter http://www.animalcenter.org/ ; it is the premier animal shelter in the nation.  It is located on 11 acres of land in Rancho Santa Fe, CA; the facility operates hospitals for every type of animal including a new hospital for horses. I have asked them if they would be willing to provide dogs for returning Wounded Warriors to help them with their healing process; they have been very positive and supportive.  Please read the below listed article that documents how dogs speed up the healing process.  Helen Woodward work very closely with a manufacturer of dog food who they feel will help fund this type of positive and uplifting program.  This would not be a political activity, or an attempt to raise funds for the Combat Veterans For Congress PAC, this is our major effort to give back to the Wounded Warriors—something we have been trying to figure out how to do for nearly four years.  We are retired military personnel, and will strictly observe military guidelines against involvement in any political activities.  We would like to co-sponsor a major event aboard USS Midway or at SeaWorld in September with the Helen Woodward Animal Shelter to support this effort. We feel we can generate broad civilian and retired military support within San Diego County to make this happen, to primarily help Patriotic Wounded Warrior “heal more quickly”.  Please get back to us, if this is something you would work with us to support.

 

Respectfully,

Joe

 

Joseph R. John, USNA ‘62

Capt          USN (Ret)

Chairman, Combat Veterans For Congress PAC

2307 Fenton Parkway, Suite 107-184

San Diego, CA 92108

 

Tel:  (619) 220-0094

Fax: (619) 220-0109

Cell: (310) 989-8778

 

http://www.combatveteransforcongress.org/

 

_____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________

 

Canine Therapy

By Brian Fung

Apr 16 2012, 12:06 PM ET1

The Department of Defense is testing canine therapy as a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.



Flickr/pmarkham

For veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, finding relief from post traumatic stress disorder usually involves psychiatric treatment, medication, or both. But what if you could achieve some of the same outcomes just by spending time with a dog?

That's what Marine Sergeant Jon Gordon tried after he suffered a traumatic brain injury in 2010 while on tour in Afghanistan. Gordon started having problems sleeping when he came back to the United States, reporting only one or two hours of rest a night. Then he met Birdie, a specially trained golden retriever. Now, Gordon says, he sleeps "ten times better" when he takes Birdie home with him.

"I slept 11 hours with him last night," said Gordon. "Without medication."

Stories like Gordon's are contributing to a growing body of research on canine therapy and its potential for helping veterans and active-duty soldiers recover from traumatic events. With the Pentagon's support, nearly 100 troops have undergone canine therapy at the Defense Department's National Intrepid Center of Excellence. Dogs rotate among groups of patients whose job it is to train the animals. It's a mutually beneficial relationship: by the end of each rotation, the program winds up providing treatment to 20 service members and produces a fully trained service dog.

Dog therapy remains an experimental treatment for now, but the pace of research on canine and other animal-assisted treatment is beginning to pick up. Last year, an Israeli study found that teenage girls suffering from psychological trauma exhibited fewer symptoms of PTSD after receiving canine therapy. Other studies credit canine therapy with lowering blood pressure among cardiac patients, reducing the perception of pain among children, and increasing the function of elderly schizophrenics.

The secret to dog therapy? Oxytocin, the hormone that lubricates social interactions by tamping down the brain's fight-or-flight instinct.

"Oxytocin replaces fight-flight with a brain and body chemistry of calm-connect," said Meg Olmert, director of research at the veterans' therapy outfit Warrior Canine Connection. "Dogs also release this same brain chemistry in humans. It is not just in your head that you think your dog is family."

For Sergeant Gordon, the relationship with Birdie has had second-order effects, too. Learning how to train a dog has helped him raise his human family.

"I have a five-year-old," Gordon said. "I was correcting the negative things all the time, but I've learned you've got to praise the positives and not so much the negatives. It just taught me a different aspect in how to shape behavior when it comes to raising a daughter."
Logged
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  

Share this topic...
In a forum (BBCode) 
In a site/blog (HTML)

 
Jump to:  

Fujitsu Computer Systems Corporation
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.18 | SMF © 2013, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!