NEADS (Dogs for Deaf and Disabled Americans)

NEADS (Dogs for Deaf and Disabled Americans) is a nationwide American 501(c)3 nonprofit program that provides trained assistance dogs to deaf and disabled Americans.

History

NEADS (Dogs for Deaf and Disabled Americans) began in 1976 as The Hearing Ear Dog Program, on the Lenox, Massachusetts campus of Holliston Junior College. With seed money from the Medfield Lions Club, students in the Animal Care Program determined that hearing dogs could be trained to become "ears" for people who are deaf or hearing impaired. In 1987, after training over 400 hearing dog "teams," The Hearing Ear Dog Program expanded to train service dogs to become the "arms and/or legs" for people with physical disabilities. In 1989, to reflect these new services, The Hearing Ear Dog Program changed its name to New England Assistance Dog Services (NEADS). NEADS began the Prison PUPs Partnership in 1998, in which prison inmates foster and train service dog puppies for one to two years. In 2000, NEADS expanded its services to include the training of social facilitated therapy dogs trained to assist children living with autism. In 2006, NEADS began a specialty program for injured soldiers returning from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars through their Canines for Combat Veterans program. The organization now resides on an 18-acre (73,000 m2) campus in Princeton.[1]

Puppy Program

NEADS uses both purebred and rescued dogs for its program. In partnership with several local animal shelters, homeless and abandoned dogs are selected for aptitude, temperament and ability, and are trained by NEADS staff to become hearing dogs. NEADS also purchases and receives donated purebred dogs from breeders. These puppies are trained via a multi-step process: the puppies begin socialization at the Laura J. Niles Early Learning Center, are trained in the Prison PUP Program, and are returned to the NEADS campus to receive advanced training.[2]

Prison PUPs Program

The NEADS Prison PUPs Program was started in 1998. NEADS partners with 10-15 correctional facilities throughout New England, where inmates train the dogs for one to two years. As early as 16 weeks, puppies live, train, and bond with inmates. NEADS trainers visit the facilities once a week to teach the inmates how to train their puppies, and to monitor progress.[2][3]

The prison pups spend weekends with volunteer "weekend puppy raisers," who educate the dogs about the outside world by taking the dogs with them everywhere they go: to the movies, grocery shopping, and experiencing general socialization.[2][4]

Training

Dogs are taught over 70 commands in two years. They learn how to pick up keys, open doors, provide physical stability for their handler, and open and close the refrigerator, among other tasks.[5] The cost to the organization to train each dog is around $30,000.

Assistance dogs

Balance/walker, Classroom, Hearing, Ministry, Service, Social, Social facilitated therapy and Specialty

Between 1976 and 2009, NEADS placed more than 1,500 assistance dogs nationwide in the following categories:[1]

Canines for Combat Veterans

The first Canines for Combat Veterans service dog, Rainbow, was placed in 2006 with Sergeant Roland Paquette, an Afghanistan war vet who lost both his legs. Rainbow was trained by an inmate at the Northeast Correctional Center.[7] According to The Landmark, "NEADS dogs serve as walker dogs when the veterans are ambulatory and walking with their prosthetics. They provide balance when walking, going up and down stairs, and getting up from a sitting or fallen position. When the veterans remove their prosthetics and transfer to wheelchairs the dogs then go into service mode. They assist by picking up dropped items, retrieving articles and turning lights on and off."[8] In addition to all the tasks that service dogs provide, some veterans report that they discover newfound confidence through their canine companions as well.[8]

References

External links

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