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Wounded Warriors Helping Dogs Help Vets

kyle 2012/05/28 21:46:19





PHOTO: Wounded warriors train service dogs to help other injured servicemen and women.






Wounded warriors train service dogs to help other injured servicemen and women. (ABC News)



















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A group of military veterans has taken on an important mission --
training service dogs to aid other wounded vets on their road to
recovery.


Dogs like four-month-old puppy Cadence are part of a three-year training
course to help wounded troops coming back from Iraq or Afghanistan.


This has been done in the past -- but what's different about this
program is that other military vets train the dogs, giving them their
own kind of therapy, as well as giving the dogs more specified training.


Sgt. Brian Bradley, who is training six dogs, lost his right arm in
Afghanistan in 2010. He credits the program with helping him readjust to
everyday life. And in return, he uses his prosthetic limb to better
train the dogs to deal with disabled soliders when they're assigned a
wounded warrior.


"When I first got to the program last year, some of the puppies -- they
were like, 'what is that?' They see the hook moving around and stuff,"
Bradley said. "I got other prosthetics, but they see the hook and we
introduce that to them because they know they are going to be seeing it
later. Also, we introduced the wheel chairs to them too and the power
chairs."


Bradley believes that with disabled vets doing the training, the dogs will better serve wounded soldiers when they are done.


"When a service member gets a service dog from another company, most of
those people are able bodied, have no issues, so they aren't really
working around anybody who is disabled," Bradley said. "So we train them
completely how every disabled service member would be."


The dogs in the program are trained to help out with everyday tasks like opening doors, turning on lights and pushing buttons.




"I can open the door for myself -- but if I have a lot of stuff, he can
push the buttons for me," Bradley said. "He can flip lights as well.
I'll say 'light' and he'll jump up on the wall and he'll flip it.
Sometimes he uses his paw, sometimes he uses his nose."


But they are also trained to help heal another kind of injury that
plagues so many soldiers when they return home from war --
post-traumatic stress disorder.


"Mine kicks in every time I put on a new prosthetic that looks identical
to my other arm," Bradley said. "It's like an instant memory of me
actually losing my arm that day. So PTSD is there."


Specialist Cory Doane, who was wounded in Afghanistan in 2011, says the
program helps him even more than it helps the dogs he's training.


"It helped me a lot more than it's helped the dog for sure," Doane said.
"It's nice just to get out and about again. Because, you know, after I
was wounded I was kind of stationary for a bit. So it's nice to get out
and actually do something productive, instead of just healing. It's nice
to contribute back."


Those contributions -- from the trainers and the dogs -- are being recognized by the military community.


Defense Secretary Leon Panetta praised the program and those who make it happen.


"To be able to have someone who can be close to you and be a part of you
as you go through some very tough times, as you rehabilitate, as you
come back and try to come back into society and have the company of a
dog -- that is really a true friend because they don't question what you
are doing, they're just your friend through thick and thin," Panetta
told ABC News' Jake Tapper. "Having that kind of relationship I think is
just great for the veterans who serve this country."


Panetta has his own canine friend, a golden retriever named Bravo, who
has shown him the kind of difference a furry friend can make.


"We could not do our job of protecting this country without people like
you who are willing to put their lives on the line," Panetta said to the
wounded warrior trainers. "And I really appreciate your service and
your sacrifice. I appreciate the effort to, you know, be able to have a
dog help someone be able to lead a fuller life. In many ways that's what
Bravo does for me in some very tough jobs that I've been in -- having
the company of Bravo around and having him provide emotional support.


"Thanks for everything you're doing to help our veterans. We owe them an
awful lot," he said. "I guess one of the ways we can repay it is to
have them have the company of a dog."

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