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Service & Support Animals For discussion of service and support animals. |
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01-12-2010, 02:13 AM | #1 | |||
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Anyone who has owned a service dog has encountered the "iron-clad" blockade to your dog's presence. I've even had a psychiatric nurse tell me that I could never again bring my dog to appointments - then spend two hours in the same room as my dog with nary a sneeze or a grab for a tissue.
How do I achieve this? Not magic, just educating myself and applying the knowledge. Just two weeks ago, I finally encountered a vet practice that teaches their clients exactly what I have been teaching vets for years. Now cats cause allergies because of proteins in their saliva that become airborne as they are shed from the fur's surface. Unless you bathe your cat before every outing and then keep them confined to a clean carrier, it is impossible to integrate a cat into an environment that includes a allergic person. But a dog's allergy is caused by dander (doggy dandruff). So what, exactly, IS dandruff. It is an a rapid growth and speedy shedding of layers of skin cells heavily colonized with a human-type dandruff yeast, a primitive plant form, complicated by the opportunistic overgrowth of bacteria feasting on the organic debris. The results - itchy skin, dander shedding and the "smells like a dog" odor we all know. If you purchase an antibacterial dog shampoo that controls doggy odor and mix it, half and half, with a blue dandruff shampoo such as those with zinc pyrithione (the head & shoulder types) or a "tar-derivative" like Selsun Blue. All these come in varieties for normal and moisturizing formulas. Shampoo every possible square inch, even the inside of a drooping ear flap, let it do its work for a few minutes (ten minutes of this will kill every last flea on a dog). Rinse thoroughly. If your dog's coat needs a conditioner, try to keep it off the skin or, preferably, use a spray-on conditioner for use on the dry coat. Use of this shampoo combo will keep your dog smelling fresh and decidedly undoggy for at least 4 weeks. The dog's skin will no longer contain the infected dander that is what causes sneezes and you can confidently go anywhere. Of course, if your dog spends significant time outdoor or likes to swim, all bets are off as s/he will be picking up soil and organisms that will speed his transition to doggy smell again. Wishing you all many pleasant hours of cuddling without fears of doggy-smelling clothes or upholstery. OMT
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. Last edited by OneMoreTime; 01-12-2010 at 02:14 AM. Reason: spelling |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | jaded2nite (01-12-2010) |
01-24-2010, 12:52 PM | #2 | ||
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The Havanese is such a breed. It was one of the criteria for our family when we selected a dog. You can visit the AKC website for more info on which breeds are hypo-allergenic.
My wife has pretty bad allergies, and our Havanese has not contributed to her allergies at all. ** |
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02-14-2010, 12:42 PM | #3 | |||
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I did obtain a labradoodle for my service dog this time, unfortunately, I received one with everything poodle except the hair! He's a terrific animal though. I found a shedding limiter shampoo works great! It's difficult to time his grooming though, with important outings. Being handicapped means it's tough enough to get myself ready! However, I found you just have to keep trying and testing shampoos. Another special shampoo by the same company (as makes the limiting shed) he and I are both allergic to! Go figure.
As for meeting people who have an allergy, the ADA says that's their problem, not ours. They need to take care of their allergy with an ENT or allergist etc., they can't deny entry (or revisting) just because of that. I generally say something like, I'm sorry to hear that, can't the allergist help you at all with that? Which puts the onus back onto them, or at least hopes to open their eyes that they can do something about it! TC
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Your conscious mind may not be able to understand what I'm telling you, but I trust your unconscious mind to use that part that is most relevant.
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02-20-2010, 07:13 PM | #4 | |||
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Someone being allergic to, or potentially allergic to, a service animal is not a legally valid reason for a handler to be denied access with their service animal. According to the ADA, if there is someone with a disabling allergy, both disabilities must be accommodated without denying access to the handler with the service animal.
However, I do use Allerpet D on my service dog. He is a Rott-Aussie mix with an Aussie coat. I'm a teacher and he's in the classroom with me. We've never had a problem with other's allergies. |
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