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by vonissk on 31 August 2012 - 01:08

by Ramage on 31 August 2012 - 02:08
by Nans gsd on 31 August 2012 - 02:08
or you can contact my friend that trains them all Allison Southard. No. Calif. (916) 726-4417 direct. N

by GSDNewbie on 31 August 2012 - 04:08

by vonissk on 31 August 2012 - 04:08
Thanks Ramsage and Nan. Nan I will contact your friend and the ADA and see what kind of info I get there.
Newbie I know absolutely nothing about service dogs except if I fall my male will help me get up and also stays by the tub when I bathe. Not anything I trained him for--he just knows when I need help. If Mike has migranes and he wanted the dog for that he certainly never told me. In fact he has other working plans for my boy. When we were exchanging emails--directions to my house--approximate time etc. he brought it up. I also know one of my very good friends is a diabetic and has a lot of problems regulating her sugar--we are talking ER visits, etc. She has a Chinese Crested that is her medical alert dog and she does alert her to when her sugar is all wacked out.
I will also say this--I used to have bad bad 2 day migranes. And a lot of times I didn't know I was going to have one. I would go to bed fine and wake up in the middle of the night or early morning sick at my stomach and my head pounding like hell. Depending on how much I was throwing up a lot of time I toughed it out. Sometimes I'd drag myself to the ER. They gave me this medication--some kind of little pink pills you dissolved under your tongue but they never did squat for me. Most of the time the only thing that helped was moraphine or demarol.
I am sure, being a retired Highway Patrol, that IF he has migranes, that he knows not to drive and definately not to drive full of meds to comabt it. All I did was ask for info, not on a person knowing when he is getting sick or not and if he should be driving and all that. If you think it's not possible for a dog to detect that, that's all you had to say--this is my opinion. I am just trying to help someone.

by Krazy Bout K9s on 31 August 2012 - 04:08
She is about 5 yrs old now.
Steph

by vonissk on 31 August 2012 - 04:08
Hi Steph and thanks for that info. IMO I would think they could detect an oncoming one. Why? Because I feel we are only at the tip of the iceberg of knowing exactly what our dogs think and understand. Also because I know they are a pain--literally LOL--but something causes that pain. I know I am going through that right now--thankfully I just got a new Dr who is as interested as I am to find out what causes my pain instead of just masking it with drugs.
I think it is fantastic that his dog KNOWS and ACTS--all I can say is what a great breed we have. I also know this--my old dr detected something wrong with my kidneys and no not an infection just something wasn't right in 2 different sets of bloodwork I had done. Before he told me this I noticed everytime I would go pee,my pet girl Sister, would want to smell of the toliet water before I flushed it. And you couldn't run her off with a stick because she was right there. Coincidence or did she know something wasn't right?
By the way glad you are back................

by Krazy Bout K9s on 31 August 2012 - 05:08
I know my personal dogs are very tuned into me and when I am starting to feel dizzy, from my accident several years ago, or just not right, they are right there by my side, I have had to lean on my big guy Red at times, to steady myself. he just seems to know and I didn't train him either. I wonder if they do really "know". Especially the ones we are really close too. I had a blind gal come out from California, to bring me her guide dog, to adopt out, the dog was VERY dog aggressive to the point of being dangerous, when she was out walking, almost pulled her into the traffic at one time, trying to get to another dog. Anyhow, sorry, got off track. She wanted to try Red in a guide harness, he is too tall, which she liked, she also hasa bad knee and needs one to steady her also.
He had never been in a harness before, he was about 1 1/2 yrs old, but he stayed by her side, guided her to where I was working a horse, and layed down next to her without moving a muscle, He usually loves to chase the horses.??? We then brought him in town to try him on the streets,. and he automatically stopped when coming to a curb or a dip where a driveway went by, now HOW IN THE HECK COULD HE JUST KNOW THAT WITH NO TRAINING???? She wanted him in the worst way, still teases me about "her" dog, but I am way too attached to him. He is awesome!!!!
Thanks for this topic, very interesting and I hope you find something out...
Steph

by VKGSDs on 31 August 2012 - 16:08
Luckily I'm already alerted to an impending migraine. My number one trigger is certain weather changes. Also mine start with a dull throbbing behind my right eye. When I feel this throb start, according to my Dr. I should immediately take my "migraine cocktail" (a prescription drug and a large dose of OTC NSAIDs). This has been a miracle cure for me, as I don't seem to have any nasty side effects to the prescription drug like a lot of people have.

by mollyandjack on 31 August 2012 - 16:08
Having had migraines as well, though not to the extent that I would consider it a disability, I can tell you that there are things that a dog could do that would assist someone with migraines. Besides alerting to an oncoming migraine (and yes there ARE body chemistry changes...), the dog could be trained to retrieve medication when the person is in too much pain to move, turn off lights, retrieve water, etc. etc. Keep in mind that per the ADA Amendments Act of 2008, episodic disorders are now covered.
I don't know where you are located, but it looks like these people have trained assistance dogs for migraine alert: http://www.shoreservicedogs.com/servhelp1.shtml. Don't know anything about them, but might be worth it to contact them.
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